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• Discover the dazzling Omni William Penn. After arriving under the porte-cochère, guests are greeted in the opulent lobby by three handmade Bohemian silver crystal chandeliers. The chandeliers are twelve feet high, eight feet wide, and weigh about 500 pounds each. The showstopping fixtures have been the focal point of the hotel lobby since the 1960s.

• Admire the Art Deco style of The Urban Room. The ballroom was designed by and named after Joseph Urban, a renowned costume and set designer for the Metropolitan Opera and the Ziegfeld Follies. The Urban Room is the only survivor of three ballrooms that Urban had designed, one in New York and the other in Chicago. The ballroom is based on a set Urban had designed for the Metropolitan Opera; the walls are black Carrara glass, and on the ceiling is a mural called "The Tree of Life" painted by Urban while lying on scaffolding.

• Discover the steel bridges that connect Pittsburgh across the region and made the city a center of American industry. 446 bridges crisscross the Ohio, Monongahela, and Allegheny Rivers, giving Pittsburgh the name “The City of Bridges.” The most famous bridges, “The Three Sisters,” are a set of identical yellow suspension bridges that have become a beloved symbol of Pittsburgh’s proud heritage. The Three Sisters were built in the 1920s and later each renamed for three area icons: Andy Warhol, Rachel Carsen, and Robert Clemente.

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