New Berkshire-based home and garden magazine debuts

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Berkshire Living Home+Garden, a new annual publication by the award-winning regional lifestyle and culture publication Berkshire Living, went on sale on newsstands today and arrived in Berkshire Living subscribers’ mailboxes this week. The 96-page full color glossy is devoted entirely to home design, architecture, gardening, and home décor. “The responses to the Home section in each issue of Berkshire Living and to our first annual special Home Design issue in September 2005 were so encouraging that we decided to roll out a magazine devoted in its entirety to the home,” said Berkshire Living publisher Michael Zivyak. Subtitled “The Good Life at Home,” Berkshire Living Home+Garden, which was designed by creative director Mary Garnish Tunicliffe, edited by noted home design author and frequent Berkshire Living contributor Gladys Montgomery, and overseen by Berkshire Living editor-in-chief Seth Rogovoy, includes a profile of renowned interior designer Bunny Williams of Falls Village, Conn., by New York Times writer Dan Shaw, and a look at a startingly contemporary, op-art style house in South Egremont, Mass., by Shonquis Moreno, an editor at the award-winning Dwell magazine. Also profiled are sculptor and landscape architect Jon Piasecki of West Stockbridge, Mass., and architect Larry Wente of Millerton, N.Y. Readers visit screenwriter Maria Nation’s spectacular garden in Ashley Falls, Mass., and museum curator Deborah Rothschild’s Japanese-influenced kitchen in Williamstown, Mass. Hancock Shaker Village curator Christian Goodwillie explains the enduring appeal of Shaker furniture, and Montgomery, the author of the new guidebook, Antiquing Weekends, takes readers on a whirlwind tour of the region’s antiques shops. The magazine includes many full-page color photographs and spreads of gorgeous home interiors, exteriors and gardens, and even features an innovative interview with Edith Wharton, who set the tone for Berkshire home design with her landmark guidebook, The Decoration of Houses. Fully eighty-two businesses participated as charter advertisers in the first annual issue of Berkshire Living Home+Garden, which will remain on newsstands until next May, when the second annual Berkshire Living Home+Garden is scheduled to be published. Berkshire Living Home+Garden is sold on newsstands throughout the greater Berkshire region and in major cities throughout New England and the Northeast, including New York, Boston, Hartford, Providence, Albany, and Saratoga, N.Y. The magazine is also available as part of a paid subscription to Berkshire Living, and in-room at many of the region’s upscale inns and hotels.
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Former Harry's Supermarket Under Construction for Restaurant

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Construction is underway to transform the former Harry's Supermarket into a restaurant

Late last month, the Conservation Commission greenlit some tree pruning on the property. New windows and a new door can be seen in the front of the building. 

"It's a substantial renovation that's currently underway here," Brent White of White Engineering said, speaking on behalf of the applicant and owner, Huajie Zhu. 

A fire gutted the longtime Wahconah Street supermarket in 2023, and the following year, Zhu purchased the property for $460,000 two years ago to build a restaurant with hibachi in the existing footprint of the more than 100-year-old building. 

White explained that the project has been ongoing for over a year, and the Community Development Board granted the property a waiver to reduce the minimum required number of parking spaces so that additional spaces aren't needed.  

He noted that, looking at the site plan, there is very little room to do so. A mirror will be installed near the sharp turn on Bel Air Avenue to alleviate traffic concerns. 

Pruning will be done on trees in the southeast corner of the existing paved parking lot, as a number of branches are hanging over. The new owners also intend to patch, sealcoat, and re-stripe the parking lot. 

A fire tore through the building less than an hour after the supermarket closed for the day three years ago. An automatic sprinkler system is required for the new use. 

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