MCLA Science Center Groundbreaking Planned This Fall

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The science center will be built on Blackinton Street, as seen in this rendering by EYP. See more renderings here.
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts will be breaking ground on the new Center for Science and Innovation this fall.

Schematics for the $54.5 million project designed by architectural firm Einhorn Yaffee Prescott Architecture and Engineering were recently completed. The contractor is Columbia Construction of Boston. Total cost including the renovation of Bowman Hall is $56.2 million, according to a report on High-Profile Blog.
 
EYP, one of the leading green design teams in the nation, was tasked with creating a high-tech laboratory for the college's science programs that would meld with the diverse architectural styles on campus as well as be energy-efficient and sustainable.

According to the firm's website, "The new, unified interdisciplinary facility will promote research-intensive, discovery-based learning and serve as a community resource." The three-story building in the tight residential area bordered by Blackinton, Montana and Porter streets will offer 65,000 square feet for nine flexible laboratories and research space for biology, environmental science, chemistry, physics, pyschology and the Berkshire Environmental Resource Center.

The center is being funded through the state's Division of Capital Asset Management and has a goal of achieving LEED Silver Certification. Its green features will include a rooftop greenhouse and geothermal and solar energy systems.

"This project is important to the college, the city of North Adams, and the region," said college President Mary K. Grant in a statement. "The Center for Science and Innovation will foster new opportunities for collaboration and new ways of engaging students."

EYP has worked on new and historic structures in academics, government, energy and science and research, including GE's renewable energy building in Schenectady, N.Y. It was most recently selected to design a new 170,000-square-foot building for New York University's College of Nursing.

The science center design was first presented to the campus in May. It will be the first new building on the campus in 40 years and is expected to be completed in 2013.

Tags: building,   MCLA,   science,   

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McCann OKs FY27 Budget, Assistant Principal Post

By Tammy Daniels iBerkshires Staff
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The McCann School Committee on Thursday approved a level-service "vanilla" budget for fiscal 2027.
 
The total spending plan for the Northern Berkshire Regional Vocational District is $13,218,090, up $564,753 or 3.69 percent over this year. The budget includes a second assistant principal, a special education teacher and interest on the building repair project. 
 
 "We frequently refer to our budget as a vanilla budget, and it sort of is this year, with some exceptions," said Finance Committee Chair Daniel Maloney. "The capital part of it is something different than the operating budget, but there will be an impact from that as well. But again, trying to be sensitive to what our communities can afford."
 
 Maloney and Superintendent of Schools James Brosnan stressed the need for an assistant principal, noting how lean the administrative staff was but how much the work has increased. 
 
"I've only got three people from my left that are responsible for this entire school," Brosnan told the School Committee. "There is no school in Massachusetts that only has a principal, assistant principal, director of students. Nothing, zero."
 
Maloney said it was a matter of "right-sizing" the organization that is running two schools. He pointed to the update from Prinicipal Justin Kratz that covered sports, enrollment, Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System testing, teacher retention and recruitment, student services, reporting to the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education, and the state's ongoing debate over graduation requirements. 
 
"You just see by the presentation tonight, by Justin, how much work goes into these things," Maloney said. "And even with our teaching staff, I often wonder how they have time to do their jobs when they've got all this data and all these things put together to feed the state, keep them happy. ...
 
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