Pittsburgh Allegheny

Leaning South Side home was condemned, should be demolished soon

Tom Davidson
Slide 1
Aaron Aupperlee | Tribune-Review
A house on 25th Street in Pittsburgh’s South Side neighborhood is leaning to one side and has been condemned.
Slide 2
Aaron Aupperlee | Tribune-Review
A house on 25th Street in Pittsburgh’s South Side neighborhood is leaning to one side and has been condemned.
Slide 3
Aaron Aupperlee | Tribune-Review
A house on 25th Street in Pittsburgh’s South Side neighborhood is leaning to one side and has been condemned.
Slide 4
Aaron Aupperlee | Tribune-Review
Signs warning of danger hang on a house on 25th Street in Pittsburgh’s South Side neighborhood that is leaning to one side and has been condemned.
Slide 5
Aaron Aupperlee | Tribune-Review
A house on 25th Street in Pittsburgh’s South Side neighborhood is leaning to one side and has been condemned.
Slide 6
Aaron Aupperlee | Tribune-Review
A house on 25th Street in Pittsburgh’s South Side neighborhood is leaning to one side and has been condemned.

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A South Side house that appears to be tipping over should be demolished shortly, city officials said.

The two-story structure was posted with a notice of imminent danger in February and charges were filed in March against Soroka Sales Inc., which owns the leaning building at 140 S. 25th St.

“The structure has been condemned, and the city has asked the owners to file for a demolition permit. It should be razed sometime soon,” Timothy McNulty, a spokesman for Mayor Bill Peduto, said in an email to the Trib.

McNulty said early Monday evening that the owners had filed for a demolition permit.

The notice notes the building is “leaning left” on the notice posted on the building. There is a fence around the building and several warning signs. The building on which the house leans also has a notice of imminent danger sign posted on it.

In May, District Judge Kim Berkeley Clark continued the case until July, when a summary trial is scheduled.

The city also filed charges of unsafe structures in May against Soroka because of the building.

A number associated with the company was disconnected Monday and the attorney representing Soroka didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.

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