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The garage's top level has been closed off for the last four years.

Pittsfield to Demo Columbus Ave. Garage, Hopes for Replacement

By Andy McKeeveriBerkshires Staff
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — There's been $6 million in state funds dangling in the wind for years to rebuild the Columbus Avenue garage. It doesn't appear the city is ever going to get the money. 
 
So with or without state support, the city is just going to tear it down.
 
The City Council on Tuesday preliminarily approved $2 million toward demolition and constructing a surface lot.
 
However, city officials are still hoping the state will eventually allocate funds to rebuild a three-story parking garage on the site. Twice now the city's state legislators have been able to tuck that money into bond bills -- but only the governor's office can approve its release.
 
In 2014, the parking deck's top level was closed off because the structure is in such disrepair. State officials had earmarked $6 million in a transportation bond bill for a new structure. Meanwhile, the city designed a $9.4 million three-story structure. Then the bill crept up to around $11 million and that is expected to have climbed even further since.
 
Last November, state Rep. Tricia Farley-Bouvier again filed for $6 million in a bond bill with hopes that it could be released.
 
But a few months ago, Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito apparently told city officials that the administration was not going to release the money. And now, the city has a new plan to just tear the parking garage down and turn it into a 140-parking space lot.
 
On Monday, state Sen. Adam Hinds said he was still pushing to get the money released and Director of Community Development Deanna Ruffer said on Wednesday that the city still intends to apply for grant funding to build the garage before moving forward with the reduced plan.
 
The implementation of the parking meters was attributed to the repeated attempts to get money for the Columbus Avenue garage. The state had supported a renovation of the McKay Street garage but required that a revenue source be instituted to pay for its maintenance. The city used the parking meter plan but its implementation was slow.
 
In January 2017, the meters were installed. That hit the state's requirement for McKay and it was hoped to have put the city in line to receive funding for Columbus.
 
"Having a parking management plan positions the City of Pittsfield for available state funding earmarked for infrastructure repairs like the Columbus Avenue Parking garage. This is the objective that matters the most," Mayor Linda Tyer said just six months ago during her state of the city speech earlier this year.
 
That was the second year in a row Tyer had pushed for the project.
 
"We've got to have a new parking garage on Columbus Avenue. It is not a small thing. The garage is needed to support our new boutique hotel, Barrington Stage audience, downtown businesses and residents, and the Intermodal Transportation Center," Tyer said in her state of the city speech in 2017.
 
Despite the importance local officials had placed on it, the state has been resistant to release the money.
 
Meanwhile, businesses nearby are getting impatient. Laurie Tierney was the developer of Hotel on North, which is across from the garage on the Summer Street side, and she asked the council to support the capital request. 
 
"I don't think it is any secret that that thing is an embarrassment," Tierney said. "I'm fine with tearing it down, lighting it up."
 
She said that section of North Street has "world-class theater," shops, restaurants, and the hotel and the garage is hurting those companies. She feels tearing down the blight is the best use of the city's money.
 
Barrington Stage Board of Trustee Michael Zaccaro said some 55,000 people come to the theater each year and the most common complaint he receives is "we have a safety issue related to parking." Fellow Trustee Marita Glodt said the company's subscriptions have declined for the first time. 
 
"I can't tell you how many times I have met a couple just exasperated and won't come back to the theater because of the parking issue," she said.
 
Downtown Pittsfield Inc. President Jesse Cook-Dubin backs those business owners. He said the city has worked toward getting a new garage for so many years but patience has run thin.
 
"We're at a point where I really believe and our organization strongly supports tearing down the garage, paving it," Cook-Dubin said.
 
The current garage should hold 278 vehicles if the top level wasn't closed off. The plan prior was to build a 378-spot garage. The council is on board with just tearing it and down and paving a new surface just to get something done with that structure. But, local officials are still holding out hope that a garage can be constructed instead.

Tags: bond bill,   DCAM,   parking garage,   

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Pittsfield CPA Committee Funds Half of FY24 Requests

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — A few projects are not getting funded by the Community Preservation Committee because of a tight budget.

The projects not making the cut were in the historic preservation and open space and recreation categories and though they were seen as interesting and valuable projects, the urgency was not prevalent enough for this cycle.

"It's a tough year," Chair Danielle Steinmann said.

The panel made its recommendations on Monday after several meetings of presentations from applications. They will advance to the City Council for final approval.  

Two cemetery projects were scored low by the committee and not funded: A $9,500 request from the city for fencing at the West Part Cemetery as outlined in a preservation plan created in 2021 and a $39,500 request from the St. Joseph Cemetery Commission for tombstone restorations.

"I feel personally that they could be pushed back a year," Elizabeth Herland said. "And I think they're both good projects but they don't have the urgency."

It was also decided that George B. Crane Memorial Center's $73,465 application for the creation of a recreational space would not be funded. Herland said the main reason she scored the project low was because it didn't appear to benefit the larger community as much as other projects do.

There was conversation about not funding The Christian Center's $34,100 request for heating system repairs but the committee ended up voting to give it $21,341 when monies were left over.

The total funding request was more than $1.6 million for FY24 and with a budget of $808,547, only about half could be funded. The panel allocated all of the available monies, breaking down into $107,206 for open space and recreation, $276,341 for historic preservation, and $425,000 for community housing.

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