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The Chair on the Corner: Why Pittsburgh’s Famous Parking Chair Tradition Refuses to Disappear

A Winter Sight That Leaves Visitors Wondering

Spend enough time driving through Pittsburgh after a major snowfall, and you’ll eventually notice something unusual sitting in the middle of a freshly cleared parking space.

Sometimes it’s a folding lawn chair.

Sometimes it’s an old kitchen chair.

Occasionally, it’s something even stranger—a worn recliner, a bucket, or a traffic cone standing guard over an empty spot.

For anyone unfamiliar with the city, the sight can be confusing. Why would someone leave furniture in the street? Is it trash waiting for collection? Did it fall out of a moving truck?

Ask a longtime Pittsburgh resident, however, and you’ll likely get a simple answer:

“That space is taken.”

Welcome to one of Pittsburgh’s most recognizable winter customs—a tradition that has survived generations of snowstorms, neighborhood debates, and even questions about legality. While unusual to outsiders, the practice represents something many locals understand immediately: if someone spent time and effort digging out a parking space, that effort deserves respect.

For many residents, the chair is much more than a piece of furniture. It’s a symbol of hard work, neighborhood culture, and a uniquely Pittsburgh approach to winter life.

Why Do Pittsburghers Put Chairs in Parking Spaces?

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