Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Hill barbershop gets $500K to relocate

Grant would renovate site in prime spot there

- By Ashley Murray

An iconic Hill District barber shop location will soon be buzzing again on the community’s main street, signifying growth where boarded up buildings have become the norm, community members say.

Thomas Boyd Sr., owner of Big Tom’s Barbershop, was awarded a $500,000 grant to move his business from a small rental space on

Centre Avenue to the site of the former Hamm’s Barbershop, a community fixture that has sat vacant for several years on one of the avenue’s busiest intersecti­ons.

“It’s just been a hard time on Centre Avenue because the business corridor has been dilapidate­d,” said Mr. Boyd, who has operated his barbershop since 2005. “We’ve been there doing business for all those years, and I’ve been renting. ... With a lot of help from the community, it’s my opportunit­y as a lifelong Hill District resident to own, and we just want to stay here.”

The half-million-dollar Pennsylvan­ia Housing Finance Agency grant, announced Thursday, will help Mr. Boyd fund planning and constructi­on costs at the 4,200 -square-foot, three-story brick building at 2178 Centre Ave., which he is in the process of acquiring from the Urban Redevelopm­ent Authority.

Mr. Boyd, under his new developmen­t company TomTom24, plans to build four affordable apartments and a second commercial space in addition to his barbershop and an outdoor community area.

The building at the intersecti­on of Centre Avenue and Kirkpatric­k Street has sat vacant for a decade after the death of Walter Hamm, a neighborho­od pillar who operated his barbershop there for 40 years.

“Mr. Hamm himself — and his barbershop — for decades was a fixture of our community,” said Councilman Daniel Lavelle, who represents the Hill District. “And where it’s located, that is the main corner in the Centre Avenue corridor. It connects east to west, south to north. It’s such an important corner that we’re going to be able to revitalize and bring back to life.

“To have such a steward like Big Tom will be tremendous,” Mr. Lavelle said.

Two $50,000 grants from the URA and Neighborho­od Allies, an organizati­on that builds partnershi­ps in distressed communitie­s, have already jump-started predevelop­ment, including cleaning out the old space.

The project has enlisted two local Black architects — Lakeisha Byrd, of Communion Place, and Gerrod Winston, of Winston Design + Developmen­t.

“To have an opportunit­y to revitalize an old barbershop and make sure we have affordable housing and have African Americans working on this project, I’m beyond ecstatic,” said Glenn Grayson Jr., Neighborho­od Allies’ senior program manager for neighborho­od developmen­t.

Mr. Grayson’s organizati­on supported Mr. Boyd through applying for the $500,000 award.

“To really navigate through this system is a barrier itself that Neighborho­od Allies wanted to make sure we addressed. It’s one thing to apply for a grant, but, number one, you have to know that the grants exist, which a lot of people in our community don’t. But then you need the help to get from point A to B,” Mr. Grayson said.

The effort was worth it because Mr. Boyd’s investment in the building “will make sure that he sticks around as a community anchor,” said Matt Madia, the group’s director of real estate.

Mr. Boyd credits Neighborho­od Allies, the URA and community groups, as well as state and local elected officials for helping him move the project forward.

“I really feel blessed,” he said, “and the barbershop has always been a safe place for the community, a gathering place for young men to feel safe. The guys leave with a fresh cut and feel confident. We like to keep positive talk in the barbershop. We’re in there talking about credit scores and owning houses. We want to support the community like the community has supported us.”

 ?? Emily Matthews/Post-Gazette ?? Thomas Boyd Sr., the owner of Big Tom’s Barbershop, gives a haircut to Franklin Goodman, of Jeannette, on Saturday inside his shop in the Hill District. Mr. Boyd recently received a grant to relocate his barbershop to the former location of Hamm’s Barbershop on Centre Avenue in the Hill.
Emily Matthews/Post-Gazette Thomas Boyd Sr., the owner of Big Tom’s Barbershop, gives a haircut to Franklin Goodman, of Jeannette, on Saturday inside his shop in the Hill District. Mr. Boyd recently received a grant to relocate his barbershop to the former location of Hamm’s Barbershop on Centre Avenue in the Hill.
 ?? Emily Matthews/Post-Gazette ?? The building at Centre Avenue and Kirkpatric­k Street in the Hill District used to house Hamm’s Barbershop and will be the site of Big Tom's Barbershop and four new apartment units.
Emily Matthews/Post-Gazette The building at Centre Avenue and Kirkpatric­k Street in the Hill District used to house Hamm’s Barbershop and will be the site of Big Tom's Barbershop and four new apartment units.

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