MountainOne First Business Tenant for PEDA Park

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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — MountainOne Financial Partners will become the second tenant at the long gestating William Stanley Business Park.

The announcement was made Tuesday morning in a joint statement by Donald Keagan, president of Hoosac Bank and executive vice president and treasurer of MountainOne, and Cory Thurston, executive director of the Pittsfield Economic Development Authority, which is responsible for developing the Park.

"Since opening MountainOne Financial Center in Pittsfield in March 2010, we've experienced steady growth. We're bursting at the seams and need a much larger space to serve customers," said Keagan in the statement. "The William Stanley Business Park is a great location — we can design a facility that best suits our needs."

MountainOne Financial has assets of more than $800 million and employs more than 200. It is headquartered at Hoosac Savings Bank on Main Street in North Adams; its holdings include Williamstown Savings Bank and South Coastal Savings in the state's eastern end.

The new financial center will include offices for Hoosac Bank and the holding company's True North Financial Services and Coakley, Pierpan, Dolan & Collins insurance. Hoosac Bank will offer business and consumer lending services, as well as automated deposit services. Conference rooms will be available for all companies to utilize for internal meetings, and for meetings with customers and community officials.

Thurston, who recently took over the helm of PEDA, said, "We are very excited to have MountainOne as our lead business tenant. It's also important to note that Bill Hines, PEDA's interim director, began discussions about this project with MountainOne last year, and really deserves the credit for today's announcement."


The park is built on 52 acres of remediated brownfields once covered with the manufacturing facilities of General Electric. The first tenant on the site is the largest solar array in New England, a 1.8 megawatt photovoltaic installation of Western Massachusetts Electric Co.

PEDA officials have come under fire because of the slow pace of the park over the past decade and its difficulty in luring tenants. Mayor James Ruberto, a strong supporter of the agency and its efforts, said the park has been a "key initiative in our economic development planning" and said he was pleased with this progress.

MountainOne's facility is in the very early planning stages, and final approvals and contracts have yet to be signed. Keagan said the building's architecture will be modern and evocative of "Financial Services of the Future." It will also be designed with LEED certification in mind, which would make it the first building in Pittsfield to receive such a designation.

"MountainOne's physical presence on the site, especially with a modern and attractive new building, will spark increased interest and activity in the park," Thurston said in the statement. "We expect other companies will follow suit, and we can build on this momentum."
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Pittsfield Signs Negotiating Rights Agreement With Suns Baseball Team

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Suns will call Wahconah Park home again. 

On Tuesday, the Parks Commission accepted a negotiating rights agreement between the city and longtime summer collegiate baseball team, the Pittsfield Suns. It solidifies that the two will work together when the historic ballpark is renovated. 

It remains in effect until the end of 2027, or when a license or lease agreement is signed. Terms will be automatically extended to the end of 2028 if it appears the facility won't be complete by then. 

"It certainly looks like it lays out kind of both what the Suns and Pittsfield would like to see over the next year or so during this construction plan, to be able to work together and work exclusively with each other in this time," Commissioner Anthony DeMartino said. 

Owner Jeff Goldklang, joining virtually, said he shared those thoughts, and the team looks forward to starting negotiations. After this approval, it will need a signature from Mayor Peter Marchetti and the baseball team. 

The negotiating rights agreement recognizes the long-standing relationship between Pittsfield and the team dating back to 2012, and the Suns' ownership group's historical ties to Wahconah Park and the city dating to the 1980s. The team skipped the 2024 and 2025 seasons after the historic grandstand was deemed unsafe in 2022.  

The Suns were granted the exclusive right to negotiate in good faith with the city for a license or lease agreement where the Suns will be the primary tenant. During the terms of the agreement, the city can't negotiate or enter into an agreement with another party for leniency, licensing, or operation of Wahconah Park for professional or collegiate summer baseball. 

"The Parties acknowledge the historic and cultural importance of Wahconah park to the residents of Berkshire County and share a mutual goal of providing community access, engagement, and programming on a broad and inclusive scale," it reads. 

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