At the risk of alienating half of Pennsylvania's second largest city, I want to talk quickly and critically about the Pittsburgh Left this week.
For those unfamiliar, the Pittsburgh Left is a hurry-up lefthand turn made by a car in front of oncoming cars, just as both lights turn green.
Pittsburgh is an old city with an odd traffic grid and a surplus of "yield on green" intersections that can make hanging a louie painfully tantric.
For that reason, the move is often made with the consent of oncoming motorists — a show of solidarity and, just as often, co-misery.
But that's not the problem with the Pittsburgh Left, this is.
Critics say it's a car-brained chaos agent that fails to consider people crossing the street as the hurry-up turn is made.
(If opposing traffic is two lanes, the intersection is now a gauntlet.)
Supporters argue it eases gridlock. Both can be true.
It's also illegal, but I'll assume everyone already knew that.
At this point, I must confess that I am a Pittsburgher who has made Pittsburgh Lefts, offered Pittsburgh Lefts, and dodged them.
There's that old driver's ed adage: Be predictable, not nice.
And while some say the Pittsburgh Left is commonplace and therefore predictable, it's definitely not a universal language.
Take this Oct. 30 Reddit post titled "Help: I don’t want the Pittsburgh Left."
In it, the anxious poster describes trying to wave off the offer, only to draw the ire of the opposing motorists behind it.
"...oncoming cars gifting it are getting angry with me," it reads. "I didn’t grow up here, I’m not in a hurry..."
It's not just humans either. This unwritten rule of the road was a major source of confusion for the driverless cars that first descended on Pittsburgh, an early testing ground, in 2016.
Programmers ultimately had to account for the X factor.
These days the city of Pittsburgh is designing intersections in ways that discourage the move, as City Paper reported in 2020 — that includes lights that give walkers and cyclists more lead time.
But the Pittsburgh Left isn't going away.
It was also a long time in the making.
What do you think? Drop me an email with your thoughts on the Pittsburgh Left, or Pennsylvania driving in general, by clicking the link below.
—Colin Deppen, PA Local editor |