Light Up Night | |
Founded: | November 21, 1960 http://www.pittsburghmagazine.com/Pittsburgh-Magazine/November-2010/Happy-Birthday-Light-Up-Night/ |
Dates: | late November |
Attendance: | over 200,000[1] |
Light Up Night is a family festival in the city of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania coinciding with the unofficial start of the Winter holiday shopping season. Many retailers in Downtown Pittsburgh remain open late, and street vendors and other concessionaires sell food and give away hot beverages, treats and promotional items. The city is decorated with Christmas lights, trees, among other holiday decorations. On Light Up Night, the skyscrapers and buildings in and around downtown keep their lights on throughout the night, lending to the name. Over 200,000 people attend the festivities.[1]
Light Up Night is also a time for free music, including many choirs, street performers, and even rock concerts, downtown and in Station Square.[2] In addition, the city offers free carriage rides downtown.
The event was held in November on the Friday before Thanksgiving until 2019, then on the Saturday before Thanksgiving from 2021.
With the increasing popularity of the event, The Pittsburgh Downtown Partnership has threatened to sue other communities and organizations that fail to pay a licensing fee for trademark infringement.[3]
The lighting of the Christmas tree in the ice skating rink in PPG Place is an annual tradition. When the lights are turned on, the ice skating rink officially opens to the public for the season. At 9600square feet, the surface is over 2000square feet larger than the famous rink in New York's Rockefeller Center.[4] [5] Each year, the Wintergarden inside PPG Place features a model train, gingerbread houses, and a collection of life-sized Santa Claus figures in traditional dress representing countries around the world.[6]
The lighting of the electric tree on the corner of the old Horne's department store is an old tradition which continues to this day.[7] A pyrotechnics show accompanies the lighting. Trees throughout the city are also lit with ceremony, including the Unity Tree at Penn Avenue Plaza.[8]
See main article: Pittsburgh Crèche. The Pittsburgh Crèche is a large-scale nativity scene located on the outside courtyard of the U.S. Steel Tower. Since 1999, the crèche appears annually during the winter season from Light Up Night to Epiphany in January. It is the only authorized replica of the nativity scene in Saint Peter’s Basilica in Rome.[9]
Many performers and mascots frequent the streets downtown, posing for pictures with children, or giving away treats. In recent years, the Kings Family Restaurants Frownie Brownie mascot has made his rounds with samples.[10]