The Washington Industrial School opened in 1909 next door to Washington Sub-District School No. 1 on 40th Street. It was reported to be Pittsburgh's first school building entirely devoted to industrial training. The two-story building, designed by the "otherwise unknown" architect Charles W. Bier, contained a "reception room, display room, carving room, drafting room, directors' room, lathe room, bench room, and demonstration room" on the first floor and on the second floor the "modeling department, freehand drawing room, sewing room, kitchen, dining room and pantry, in addition to which is a spacious library". A swimming pool and gymnasium were located in the basement. In 1930, the school was expanded to take in the students from the Arsenal Trade School, which was being razed to clear the site for
Arsenal Junior High School. A one-story shop building was constructed behind the school to accommodate the additional students. In 1937, a much larger addition was built onto the front of the original school with the help of federal
Public Works Administration funding. The new building was a four-story,
Art-Deco-style structure designed by
Marion M. Steen. By 1969, the school's enrollment had declined to only 100 students and it was converted from a vocational-technical high school into an "Education Center" which housed various programs including occupational-vocational-technical classes and an experimental
open classroom school. On February 2, 1972,
Julie Nixon Eisenhower visited the school during
her fathers re-election campaign to discuss busing. In May 1972, an international contingent of students visited the center from
Brazil,
Thailand,
South Korea,
Venezuela,
Chile,
Peru,
Afghanistan, and
Libya. The building was listed on the
National Register of Historic Places in 1986. It opened in 2019 as the
TRYP by Wyndham Pittsburgh/Lawrenceville, with 108 guest rooms and two restaurants. The hotel experienced financial problems and is facing foreclosure as of 2025, with one developer proposing to turn the building into affordable housing. ==References==