The upper floors of the Point Breeze mansion, Clayton, look quite different than the lower floors open to the public.
Filled with expansive rooms, luxurious furniture and splendorous red carpets, the first two floors of the 23-room behemoth look much like they did while resided in by Henry Clay Frick during the Gilded Age. But if someone were to take a stairway up to floor three, they would see more of a “work-in-progress,” said Dalena Collins, learning and interpretive coordinator for The Frick Pittsburgh.
Up there, things are a little more cramped. The rooms, usually used by staff for cataloguing and curating items, are cluttered with artifacts laid out on foldable tables and meticulously organized furniture resting on the ground.
Now, the rooms will be used to show a different sid