Fifth and Dinwiddie Fiasco: URA Clings to Embattled Uptown Developer

Six years after Pittsburgh’s Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) tapped developer Derrick Tillman to transform the Fifth and Dinwiddie corner into new housing, the Uptown site is still an empty lot. Neighbors say their patience is gone, taxpayer-backed support remains untouched, and city leaders are now promising to take a hard look at how this all got so stuck.

What the URA Signed Off On

According to the URA’s April 2025 board packet, the agency signed off on a sizable public financing package for the long-promised development. The board authorized a Rental Gap Program loan and a seller’s note tied to the Fifth and Dinwiddie parcel, including a $3,250,000 RGP loan and a $390,000 URA seller’s note to help build a roughly 103-unit mixed-use building with multiple affordability levels, as outlined in the URA agenda.

The same agenda notes that the board granted a formal waiver to exceed the Rental Gap Program’s usual $2 million cap so the larger loan could move forward. On paper, at least, the deal is structured to plug a big financing hole in exchange for a sizable chunk of affordable and mixed-income housing.

Bankruptcy, Unpaid Taxes and a Lender Suit

While the Uptown lot has sat idle, Tillman’s broader real estate world has been under legal and financial stress. Public bankruptcy notices show one related company, DNT Property Investments LLC, filed a Chapter 11 case and sought court approval last year to market and sell rental properties in Wilkinsburg and McKeesport as part of an effort to satisfy creditors, according to filings summarized in the Pittsburgh Legal Journal.

Local reporting has also highlighted bankruptcy records that show unpaid property taxes tied to the company and note that the Black Economic Development Fund later sued Tillman’s Fifth and Dinwiddie entity, alleging a roughly $1.9 million loan default. Tillman’s side has denied that claim, according to the same court-related notices.

URA Says It Is Vetting a “Qualified Buyer”

Despite the mounting questions, the URA says it is following its standard playbook for selling public land. Staff point to the authority’s disposition rules and its “qualified buyer” requirement, which call for a developer to clear several hurdles before any deed changes hands…

Story continues

TRENDING NOW

LATEST LOCAL NEWS