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The brick facing on the rear of 19 Eagle St. collapsed Tuesday night. Recent wood framing to support the structure can be seen inside.

Emergency Demo Called for Collapsing North Adams Building

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
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Firefighters were called to the rear of 19 Eagle after calls about bricks falling from the building. 
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — By the end of the Wednesday, Moderne Studios may be just a memory. 
 
The rear of the three-story brick building collapsed Tuesday night and officials have deemed it a public hazard that needed an emergency demolition. 
 
"We're very sad that the back of the Moderne Studio building has fallen down despite our efforts to work with the landlord," said Mayor Jennifer Macksey. "I think we're beyond that. Hopefully, by tomorrow morning, he will secure a demo company or we will."
 
The building at 19 Eagle St. was sold at auction in December 2022 for $100,000 to the Barry Group Real Estate after being empty for years. 
 
Some work had been done by a previous owner to support the structure and the new owners had been continuing that effort but their engineers and contractors apparently couldn't get ahead of the falling bricks. 
 
City officials had been concerned for months about the condition of the building, particularly the rear section that had dangerously deteriorated and its proximity to the former Desperados. 
 
The rear area was fenced off for safety reasons more than a month ago and the occupants in the apartment over Desperados were evacuated.
 
The mayor and Building Inspector William Meranti said the owner had acknowledged that the building had become a hazard. 
 
Fire Chief Brent Lefebvre said a neighbor had reported a large noise as the brick walls collapsed. Firefighters and police responded and National Grid and Berkshire Gas were called in to ensure power and gas was shut off from 19 Eagle and the former Desperados.
 
Eagle Street was closed for a time beginning around 8:30 and then briefly reopened before traffic was rerouted over North Church Street. A fire watch was being set up for the night to monitor the building. 
 
The scene was reminiscent of the rainy night back in 2016 when historic Eagle Street was closed off because of concerns over the structural integrity of the St. Francis' Church. That massive building took days to deconstruct but the demolition of Moderne Studio is expected to happen in hours. 
 
The origins of the building dates to the mid-1800s and it was extended by the Tower brothers to three stories in the 1870s with four two-bedroom apartments on the upper floors. It hosted a number of businesses but is best known as the location of Moderne Studios for nearly 40 years.
 
The photography business was established by Philip Carr and Samuel Scarfone in 1947; they moved to 19 Eagle in 1964.
 
The front windows displayed numerous wedding, engagement, high school graduation, yearbook and portrait pictures over the years. Scarfone, the sole owner by then, retired in 2002 at age 80. 
 
The loss of the building leaves another gap on the historic street as the building on its south side burned and had to be demolished in 2008. That vacant lot was more recently turned into a pocket park. 

Tags: demolition,   Eagle Street,   historic buildings,   

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MCLA in Talks With Anonymous Donor for Art Museum, Art Lab

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff

Andre Lynch, the new vice provost for institutional equity and belonging, introduces himself to the trustees, some of whom were participating remotely.
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts may be in line for up to a $10 million donation that will include a campus art museum. 
 
President Jamie Birge told the board of trustees on Thursday that  the college has been in discussions for the last couple years with a donor who wishes at this point to remain anonymous.
 
"It's a donor that has a history of working with public liberal arts institutions to advance the arts that those institutions," he said.  "This donor would like to talk with us or has been talking with us about creating art museum and an art lab on campus."
 
The Fine and Performing Arts Department will have input, the president continued. "We want to make sure that it's a facility that supports that teaching and learning dynamic as well as responding to what's the interest of donor."
 
The college integrated into the local arts community back in 2005 with the opening of Gallery 51 on Main Street that later expanded with an art lab next door. The gallery under the Berkshire Cultural Resource Center had been the catalyst for the former Downstreet Art initiative; its participation has fallen off dramatically with changes in leadership and the pandemic. 
 
This new initiative, should it come to pass, would create a facility on MCLA Foundation property adjacent to the campus. The donor and the foundation have already split the cost of a study. 
 
"We conducted that study to look at what approximately a 6,500-square-foot facility would look like," said Birge. "How we would staff the gallery and lab, how can we use this lab space for fine and performing arts."
 
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