


Town Place also has an all-season sport court, spa, business center, conference room, video and gamers’ room, party lounge, library and grill area. Nightly room rates are $130-$350 and there is a $300 non-refundable sanitation fee for each pet guest. A section of the terrace is covered with outdoor carpeting, so that dogs can do their business there. Dog guests must weigh less than 50 pounds. The rooftop “pet terrace” is set up as a dog park, but cats are also welcome at Town Place. says its 62-unit “Aparthotel” at 424 Stanwix St., Downtown, will accommodate both long-term tenants and guests who only want to stay a night or a week.

Pittsburgh’s first rooftop dog park is almost ready for the pets of people who stay at Town Place, which is set to open this month. Town Place, an “Aparthotel” at 424 Stanwix St., Downtown, will offer a rooftop pet terrace and accommodate tenants and short-term guests. The view from the rooftop pet terrace at Town Place, an Aparthotel that will open soon Downtown.Īparthotel will have Pittsburgh's 1st rooftop dog park “We love rescuing animals and we love rescuing customers from chain hotels.” “There is really no reason for a hotel to say people cannot bring their pets,” said Mr. Guests who stay at least five nights receive a $250 credit toward a pet adoption from their local shelter. Now the Shadyside Inn has gone a step further. The suites are generally $139-$199 a night.Īt check-in, people get freshly baked cookies and dogs get canine cookies and goodie bags that include Rachael Ray Nutrish products. There is no nightly fee for pets, but there is a $100 cleaning deep cleaning fee for pet owners.

There are no carpets in the hotel and the lovely golden floors that look like oak are actually vinyl plank, which is much easier to clean than hardwood. Plesset said, noting that he has allergies and asthma. “We have equipment that will clean up after them,” Mr. And if a dog wants to lounge on the upholstered furniture or in the beds, that’s no problem. Some hotels and motels that allow pets require them to be in crates and prohibit them from being alone in the room when no owner is present. That includes bringing dogs of all sizes - and the occasional cat - to the Shadyside Inn. “Because we are independent, we can say yes to the requests of our guests,” he said. He is also a third-generation hotel owner and operator. Plesset is a pilot and co-founder of Pittsburgh Aviation Animal Rescue Team, which has transported more than 7,500 pets from disaster areas and high-kill animal shelters to the safety of shelters and rescues that can find homes for them. Plesset, was a wild 7-month-old puppy when he adopted him from a Pittsburgh animal shelter. It’s small and simple, just a couple of pine trees with a thick layer of mulch covering the ground and a white picket fence to keep the dogs in. Three is the close to capacity for the hotel’s dog park. Though three of the hotel buildings front on busy Fifth Avenue, “in the other direction is a residential neighborhood which is perfect for walking dogs,” Mr. Henry, 5, takes a break from chasing tennis balls in the new dog park at the Shadyside Inn All Suites Hotel, one of the new dog-friendly design and amenities offered at the hotel.
