Acme, Pennsylvania

Acme is an unincorporated community in Donegal Township, Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania, Mount Pleasant Township, Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania, and Bullskin Township, Fayette County, Pennsylvania in the United States. The Acme ZIP code of 15610 extends well beyond the more densely populated part of the area, into rural parts of Donegal Township in Westmoreland County and Bullskin Township in Fayette County.

Acme, Pennsylvania
Etymology: "acme," meaning the "peak" or the "top"
Acme, Pennsylvania
Location of Acme in Pennsylvania
Acme, Pennsylvania
Acme, Pennsylvania (the United States)
Coordinates: 40°7′38″N 79°26′5″W
CountryUnited States
StatePennsylvania
TownshipsDonegal Township, Westmoreland County
Mount Pleasant Township, Westmoreland County
Bullskin Township, Fayette County
Time zoneUTC-4 (EST)
  Summer (DST)UTC-5 (EDT)
ZIP code
15610
Area code(s)724
identified by ZIP code 15610,

Geography

Acme is located in Donegal Township and Mount Pleasant Township, in southern Westmoreland County, and in Bullskin Township in the northeastern corner of Fayette County at 40°7′38″N 79°26′5″W (40.12731, -79.434929).

The name "Acme" refers to the area's location atop Chestnut Ridge in the Allegheny Mountains.

Surrounding communities


Acme Community Center

History

Acme has always been an agricultural community; however, three attempts to develop resorts in the area have likely been inspired by its gateway position along the edge of the Laurel Highlands.

Treetops & Mountain Circles/Polymath Park

In 1962, architect Peter Berndtson developed a master plan for a 125-acre (0.51 km2) property named Treetops & Mountain Circles.[1] Berndtson, an original apprentice of Frank Lloyd Wright, designed a network of twenty-four private houses, each within a 300-foot (91 m) diameter clearing in the woods. If completed, the clearings and their connecting roads would have depicted a bunch of grapes when viewed from the sky. Only two homes—those for developers Harry Blum and James Balter—were actually built.

Forty-two years later, local homebuilder Thomas D. Papinchak deconstructed the Donald C. Duncan House in Lisle, Illinois (a suburb of Chicago) and relocated it to the Acme property.[2] The Duncan House was designed by Wright as an instance of his Usonian style. In 2019, a second Wright house, R. W. Lindholm Residence, was relocated from Cloquet, Minnesota and opened to the public.[3] In honor of the two architects, the failed development has been renamed Polymath Park Resort. All four houses have been offered as overnight accommodations for visitors to Wright's Fallingwater and Kentuck Knob in nearby Stewart Township.

Bear Rocks

On November 7, 1965, Pittsburgh real-estate developer Scott Hamilton advertised Bear Rocks, a new "Mountain Ski Area", in the (now-defunct) Pittsburgh Press newspaper.[4] The development in a section of forest originally known as Southerwood, along the western descent of Chestnut Ridge, featured over 1000 house lots in a wooded setting connected by 22 miles of roads. Codes prevented the cutting of more trees than necessary for home construction, unconnected buildings, business restrictions, prohibitions on brick and metal siding and similar provisions intended to maintain the rural character of the development. Two separate lodge buildings were built; one at the upper entrance to the development and another at the base of the ski slopes. At its peak, the Bear Rocks Ski area featured eight slopes and trails with a double-chair lift and snow-making equipment. The advertisement also boasted a private fishing lake, "magnificent" swimming pool, rustic cocktail lounge, tennis, horseback riding, social activities, and "golf at a private country club nearby."

Bear Rocks reportedly ceased ski operations after the 1973 season. The ski lodge and restaurant burned to the ground a few years later and was not rebuilt, however the community lodge remains as a focal point for residents. The community continues to grow, and new homes have been constructed in the clearings of the former ski slopes and continue to be built on vacant lots. While the rustic character of the development is still very evident, it has suffered somewhat in recent years as the Bear Rocks codes have been increasingly ignored, including the clear-cutting of lots, and some logging operations.[5]

Forest Lake

Following in the footsteps of the very successful Bear Rocks, this much smaller resort featuring a recreational lake, a swimming pond, and wooded house lots, Forest Lake, was developed adjacent to the eastern edge of Bear Rocks along Bear Rocks road. As part of the sales promotion, a red caboose, now greatly decayed, was placed on one of the lots. Forest Lake never enjoyed the success of its larger neighbor and only 5 houses were built. To this day one of the sample A-framed houses, the owner built a Tudor house over the A-framed house. Same owner built his ionic bridge on Forest Lake.

[6]

Government

An unincorporated place, Acme is within Mount Pleasant Township.

Transportation

Pennsylvania Route 31, a two-lane artery, runs east and west through the center of Acme. The Pennsylvania Turnpike parallels the state road to the north, with the closest interchange in Donegal, 2.5 miles (4.0 km) to the southeast. Because Turnpike traffic is occasionally diverted to the state route, additional lanes were added to accommodate truck traffic down the latter's western descent of the Allegheny Mountains, on a 2-mile (3 km) stretch of highway known as Three Mile Hill.

Recreation and amenities

Chestnut Ridge Park features a 25-acre (100,000 m2) recreational pool (lake) with a boat launch and short walking trail. The county park provides opportunity for fishing, hunting and other outdoor activities in a quiet, isolated rural setting.

Acme Speedway hosts kart racing every Saturday night from mid-April through late September.

Donegal Highlands, an 18-hole public golf course, offers a unique challenge to golfers of all abilities.

Stone Villa Wine Cellars provides seasonal outdoor entertainment as well as daily wine tastings.

In addition to getaway vacation rentals, Polymath Park[7] provides tours of all four houses on a daily basis.

References

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