Pittsburg, PA
Steelers Could Land Jets Superstar to Fix WR Problem
The Pittsburgh Steelers, after entering Week 15 with a 10-3 record and two-game lead over the Baltimore Ravens in the AFC North, have begun to unravel.
A stretch of three contests in 11 days resulted in nothing but losses for the Steelers, who are now 10-6 and in danger of dropping to as low as the No. 6 seed in the playoffs. Baltimore, conversely, won all of its games over that same period and now has a rather secure hold on the division at 11-5 ahead of Week 18.
There’s no finite answer as to why Pittsburgh has stumbled the way it has, but a hamstring injury to No. 1 wide receiver George Pickens further showcased the lack of depth and high-end talent the team has at the position outside of the 23-year-old star.
The Steelers’ offense couldn’t gain much traction during Pickens’ absence, which lasted from Weeks 14 to 16, and things didn’t improve much upon his return in a 29-10 defeat at the hands of the Kansas City Chiefs in Week 17 either.
Thus, TWSN’s Tyler Raymond believes Pittsburgh should pursue a deal for the New York Jets’ Garrett Wilson this offseason, who reportedly drew trade interest ahead of the deadline and could be looking for a way out of East Rutherford.
“Trading for Wilson would give the Steelers one of the strongest receiving duos in the NFL,” Raymond wrote. “And more importantly, add another dimension to an offense that has already shown flashes of being great. Wilson wanting out provides the team with yet another shot at a position they so desperately need help at, and it would be shocking if they didn’t go all out to land the star.”
Entering Week 17, Wilson had put up 90 receptions for 987 yards and six touchdowns. The 2022 first-round pick also finished with over 1,000 yards in the first two campaigns of his NFL career despite playing within a subpar offense, and he profiles as one of the league’s most talented receivers.
With Pickens entering a contract year in 2025, it’s unknown how the Steelers will approach handing him a new contract. Acquiring Wilson, which would require parting with significant draft capital given that he technically has two years left on his rookie deal thanks to the fifth-year option, would provide the team with another premier weapon in the passing game.
He could either form a lethal duo with Pickens for the foreseeable future, or help soften the blow of him heading elsewhere. Pittsburgh has struck out in its prior attempts to bring in a top-end receiver, but landing Wilson would change that narrative.
Make sure to bookmark Steelers On SI to get all your daily Pittsburgh Steelers news, interviews, breakdowns and more!
Pittsburg, PA
‘It began right here in the Hill District’: Bill from Rep. Lee seeks national honor for Freedom House
Pittsburg, PA
Behind the build: engineering Pittsburgh’s new airport terminal
Hear from the Buro Happold team on the engineering behind Pittsburgh International Airport’s new landside terminal.
When Pittsburgh International Airport opened its new landside terminal in November 2025, it wasn’t just a ribbon‑cutting – it was a reset. The project replaced a 30‑year‑old layout designed for a hub airline that no longer exists, transforming the airport into a streamlined, Pittsburgh‑first operation built around the people who actually use it.
The Terminal Modernization Program (TMP) did more than link a new 800,000 ft² landside terminal directly to the existing concourses. It rethought a half‑mile disconnect between tickets and gates, retired the underground tram called the Automatic People Mover (APM), and re‑established clarity, comfort, and efficiency as the organizing principles of the passenger journey.
For Buro Happold, the challenge was both technical and cultural: engineer a right‑sized terminal that would feel effortless to travelers while quietly delivering resilience, efficiency, and long-term operability. In this Q&A, the team walks through the decisions behind the systems – from displacement ventilation to microgrid integration – and the choreography required to modernize an airport without ever shutting it down.
Meet the engineering team behind the new terminal
A building shaped by use, not nostalgia
The old Pittsburgh terminal felt stuck in the early 1990s: a mall‑like landside building, security, and then a tram ride to a distant airside concourse. It was a spatial diagram designed for connections, not for the 98% of travelers who now begin or end their journeys in Pittsburgh. The new plan positions the landside terminal directly against the airside concourses. “The split made a stressful trip more stressful,” said Joe Gaus, associate principal. “Now the sequence is straightforward: check in, central screening, and a short connector – no train, fewer unknowns.” The modernization project reversed the logic. Ticketing, screening, and arrivals were consolidated into a single hall linked directly to the gates, cutting time and uncertainty while opening up generous meet‑and‑greet spaces for a city that prefers to walk inside to welcome family and friends.
The architecture – led by Gensler and HDR, in association with luis vidal + architects – doesn’t hide its regional references: an undulating roof suggestive of rolling hills; columns branching like trees; fiber‑optic “stars” that glance off glass at night. What it does hide, by design, is the machinery of comfort. “You see the nature,” Gaus says, “and only when you look closer do you realize the technology is doing the work in the background.”
Integrating today with yesterday – while never closing
Modernizing a live airport is not a matter of swapping parts. The new terminal was built “separate ‑through‑construction,” as Yelena Nelson, senior mechanical engineer, describes it, to preserve operations until the moment of carefully sequenced tie‑in. That meant temporary routes, scaffolding, and wayfinding choreographies that changed as the building neared the old concourse. “The challenge wasn’t wiring old equipment to new,” Nelson says. “It was delivering next to a live airport without breaking its rhythm.”
Phasing became the delivery mechanism: one package for everything underground – utilities, stormwater, and the remnants of the train infrastructure – and another for everything above. The connector bridge formed a new passage aligning the security exit with the existing concourse. “LED walls, the bridge motif – it’s a reveal that feels like Pittsburgh,” says Mike Weleski, who led portions of the MEP and site integration. “All while the airport kept moving.”
Behind the scenes, the team wrote a white paper for the airport authority on its building management system. Do they double down on the incumbent platform or open the market to competition? Matt Hochberger, the project lead, explains the calculus: keep the operator workflows and alarm philosophies that staff know, but design the new terminal’s BMS to interoperate – not lock in. The owner chose open bid, preserving flexibility without sacrificing a seamless handoff to facilities. It’s the kind of decision passengers never feel, but operators make every day.
Power that protects operations
Pittsburgh International Airport is powered by a 23‑megawatt microgrid – a blend of on‑site natural gas generation and solar – capable of operating independently from the regional grid. The new terminal had to integrate seamlessly into that system. “We tied in at medium voltage with new 3.5 kV switchboards, then stepped down to 480V for the building,” says Jeremy Hall, associate electrical engineer. That strategy allowed the team to shrink the diesel generator to life‑safety loads – emergency lighting, egress, fire/life safety – and to rely on the microgrid’s redundancy for optional standby, cutting emissions and fuel risk.
Where the power system provides resilience, the controls framework ensures efficiency. The design incorporates daylight‑responsive dimming, occupancy and vacancy controls, and a full LED specification that cuts lighting power density to roughly 30 percent below ASHRAE code. The result is an automated, low‑waste operation that performs without demanding attention. It’s engineering that works in the background – constantly optimizing, rarely seen.
Comfort engineered into the background
If the project has a signature technical move, it’s displacement ventilation. In halls of this scale – soaring ceilings, long sightlines, and air volumes that would typically demand brute‑force conditioning – Buro Happold rethought the physics. Instead of pushing large quantities of air from high above, the team supplied conditioned air low and slow, allowing natural stratification to lift heat and contaminants clear of the occupied zone.
“The airflow isn’t felt – no drafts,” Hochberger says. “You’re calmer in the place people are usually most anxious: baggage claim.”

Those lofty ceilings, a defining architectural element of the new hall, were made possible precisely because the engineering retreated from them. By delivering air at the floor and letting the upper volume act as a quiet thermal buffer, the team avoided cluttering the roofline with the typical web of ducts, grilles, and mechanical hardware. The height could read as pure architecture – light, airy, unbroken.
Function followed form: diffusers are integrated into benches, walls, and carousel surrounds, preserving valuable floor‑to‑floor height and keeping the focus on the sweep of the roof instead of the machinery behind it. “We worked carefully with the design team to hide the big openings,” Nelson adds. The result is a space that feels open and intuitive, while the engineering works invisibly in the background to keep it comfortable at every scale.
Modeling as risk management
The integration platform for all of this was BIM. “We modeled space by space with exact elevations,” says Rachel Weaver, an electrical engineer who helped with BIM coordination. The point wasn’t just clash detection; it was construction intent. Electrical conduits and feeders were pre‑cut from the model to minimize waste. On the plumbing side, the team used Revit to thread storm piping through the undulating structure – a challenge made more urgent when the plumbing group proposed a stormwater reuse system that hadn’t been in the initial brief. “You have a roof this large,” Weleski says. “Why not capture and treat a portion for the landscape terraces and reduce domestic water demand?” The owner agreed.
A local project with global reach
The talent bench shifted as the program matured: early concept work drew on Buro Happold’s global aviation experience, then moved through New York and Pittsburgh for design and construction administration. What never shifted was proximity.
“We were on site weekly,” Gaus says. “Half the time it was faster to drive to the airport than to the office.” Problems that might have lingered on emails resolved in thirty‑minute hallway meetings or impromptu field walks with the contractor and architect.
Jeremy Snyder is direct about why that mattered: “It’s the airport’s building. They have to operate it. We moved efficiently and treated the owner as part of the team making decisions on design.”
What people will notice – and what they won’t
Travelers will recognize the ‘Pittsburgh-ness’ of the new hall immediately: the lift of the roofline, the light from all sides, the constellations overhead. They’ll also notice what’s missing. The tram is gone; the walk is shorter; the signage reads clearly. Much of what makes that possible is deliberately invisible – air delivered where people are; power and data routed where they need to be; sensors adjusting light to the day – so the building can do more with less.
For the engineers who lived with it for years, the pride is more granular. “We had to keep a complex campus breathing while we changed a lung,” Hochberger says, smiling at the metaphor. Weleski calls it a legacy project. “You don’t build a new airport here every decade,” he says. “I came to work on this. I can’t wait to fly out of it.”
In the end, the terminal modernization reflects the spirit of the city it serves: a clarity of purpose, an economy of means, and an insistence on doing the hardest work out of view so the experience feels effortless. It is, as the team repeatedly noted, an airport for Pittsburgh, by Pittsburgh – engineered to carry the region forward.

For us, the measure of success wasn’t just opening a new terminal – it was giving Pittsburgh an airport that feels effortless to use and resilient to operate. When engineering disappears into the experience, that’s when we know we’ve done our job.”
— Jeremy Snyder, US Aviation Director
Pittsburg, PA
March concerts: Journey, Jason Isbell, Cody Johnson and much more
-
World2 days agoExclusive: DeepSeek withholds latest AI model from US chipmakers including Nvidia, sources say
-
Massachusetts2 days agoMother and daughter injured in Taunton house explosion
-
Montana1 week ago2026 MHSA Montana Wrestling State Championship Brackets And Results – FloWrestling
-
Oklahoma1 week agoWildfires rage in Oklahoma as thousands urged to evacuate a small city
-
Louisiana4 days agoWildfire near Gum Swamp Road in Livingston Parish now under control; more than 200 acres burned
-
Technology6 days agoYouTube TV billing scam emails are hitting inboxes
-
Denver, CO2 days ago10 acres charred, 5 injured in Thornton grass fire, evacuation orders lifted
-
Technology6 days agoStellantis is in a crisis of its own making





