PEDA has set an open house at the William Stanley Business Park. In the distance, remediation work continues at Silver Lake.
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Pittsfield Economic Development Authority will showcase some of its William Stanley Business Park to curious city residents and other parties at an open house event set for Tuesday, June 25.
The open house, which is being held in conjunction with the Tyler Street Business Group, will include tours of some of the vacant former General Electric commercial property near the intersection of Kellogg Street and Woodlawn Avenue, as well as its headquarters at 81 Kellogg St.
"This is like a chamber networking event," said PEDA Executive Director Corydon Thurston. "This is our first foray, we're going to do this with the Tyler Street group. We're part of the neighborhood."
In addition to Tyler Street business owners, members of the City Council will receive invites, and the public is welcome to attend.
Light refreshments will be served, and a video slideshow has been prepared to give visitors a better glimpse into the quasi-public agency and the challenged parcels of industrial property it oversees.
"We're going to open up the gates, so if people would like to, weather permitting, we'll get some folks who have an interest to walk down into the 'Teens section' [an area so designated because it held GE buildings numbered in the teens] and just get a feel for what the property looks like from the other side of the fence," explained Thurston.
The following day, PEDA and members of the city's Department of Community Development will make a presentation in Waltham before the board of the Massachusetts Life Sciences Center in the hopes of acquiring funding for a consultant to conduct research and develop a business plan for a hoped-for life sciences center at William Stanley. Pittsfield will seek a portion of the $6.5 million in funds earmarked in 2008 for the proposed center to pay the consultant in developing a true business plan in the hopes of eventually making this project a reality.
Thurston, along with Pittsfield's new Director of Community Development Douglas Clark, expressed optimism about their chances of securing this funding, citing productive discussions with MLSC President Susan Windham-Bannister.
"I don't think there's any question they want to fund it," said Clark. "I think they want to make sure that what they're funding hits their objectives. The way they described it is that it's great that we have a vision, but they want this study to really prove that vision out through market research."
In other business, progress is ongoing with preparations to replace the demolished Woodlawn Avenue bridge crossing the business park, Thurston told the board of PEDA on Wednesday. Thurston said last-minute details on right-of-way agreements were being worked through, as well as several environmental restrictions that affect the bridge project.
Initially, it was thought that construction of the bridge would be completed by this summer, helping to alleviate issues from the impending closure of Silver Lake Boulevard as the lake remediation enters its next phase, but delays throughout have recurringly pushed back the start date for this project. Last fall, the state Department of Transporation debuted a partial design plan in Pittsfield for public comment.
"A lot of behind the scenes work there, but for the state, it's moving at a rapid pace," said Thurston.
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Pittsfield ARPA Funds Have Year-End Expiration Date
By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — American Rescue Fund Act monies must be spent by the end of the year, and Pittsfield is already close.
In 2021, the city was awarded a historic amount of money — $40,602,779 — in federal remediation funds for the COVID-19 pandemic. Through the end of September 2025, more than $37 million had been expended, and 90 percent of the 84 awarded projects were complete.
Special Project Manager Gina Armstrong updated the City Council on the ARPA funds during its first meeting of the new term on Tuesday.
As of September 2025, the $4.7 million allocated for public health and COVID-19 response has been fully expended. Additionally, $22.7 million of the $24.9 million allocated for negative economic impacts has been expended, and nearly all of the infrastructure funds, more than $5.8 million, have been expended.
Less than $3 million of the $3.7 million allocated for revenue replacement has been spent, along with about $873,00 of the $1.1 million allocated for administration.
Armstrong noted that in the last quarter, "Quite a bit more has been done in the areas of the housing projects." In 2022, then-Mayor Linda Tyer allocated $8.6 million in ARPA funds for affordable housing initiatives, and the community is eager for those additional units to come online.
Nine supportive units at the Zion Lutheran Church on First Street received more than $1.5 million in ARPA funds, the 7,700-square-foot housing resource center in the basement received more than $4.6 million, and the Westside Legends' home construction project saw more than $361,000 for two single-family homes on South Church Street and Daniels Avenue.
"This is just about complete, and I believe that people who are currently homeless or at risk of homelessness will be able to take these apartments in the very near future," Armstrong said, noting the supportive units and resource center that had a ribbon-cutting in late 2025.
The Point in Time count, which measures people experiencing homelessness, will occur on Sunday, Jan. 25, and the Three County Continuum of Care stresses that every survey matters. click for more