NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The Conservation Commission gave the Porches its blessing to go forward with a plan to add parking.
Charlie LaBatt, of Guntlow & Associates, went over the River Street hotel's plan to expand parking and green space on the campus as well as to remediate the former Sunshine Pools property across the street.
"This is basically a riverfront redevelopment project trying to encompass all of what the Porches campus is trying to do in and around their property," LaBatt said.
LaBatt said parking will be expanded on the west and the east sides of the campus and the current central parking lot will be removed.
"They would like to remove that and make it better for their patrons with more wild space or unpaved areas," he said.
He said the plans also include the erection of a new structure for gatherings.
LaBatt said the project will encroach on the riverfront and that the corresponding remediation will be done on the recently purchased Sunshine Pools property at the corner of Marshall and River streets. Berkshire Hills Development Corp. bought the pool property last December for $250,000 and giving the company control of three corners on the four-way intersection with Houghton Street.
"We want to demolish the existing structure and the pavement, which is primarily impervious," he said. "We want to use that lot for a lot of the riverfront mitigation."
LaBatt said the plans did include parking on the Sunshine Pools lot and although that would still meet mitigation criteria, it is something the Porches may end up not even doing.
"They don't really want to do it but ... even the Porches needs overflow parking and certainly Mass MoCA needs it at times," he said. "It is forward planning, so we have all of our ducks in a row so if five years down the road if they feel as though they need more parking that can pursue it."
He said for the time being the Porches would likely make the area green space. The commission did note that the order would expire in three years.
The commissioners placed a few stipulations on their approval and asked that the contractor manage dust control and make sure debris and soil from the work does not travel. They also asked that the Porches provide a report on existing underground retention structures.
Chairman Jason Moran did note that demolition and excavation work has already begun without commission approval.
"It would appear to me that they have already started without our permission," he said. "I am not running around with red cards but put it in the record that they did start work."
LaBatt did not deny that and said at this point the Porches is playing catch up.
The entire project would likely be phased with the most immediate portion of the project being the demolition of Sunshine Pools, he said.
In other business, the commission heard from Tourists hotel project manager Eric Kerns, who told the commission that plans are to scale back work near the 1813 farmhouse adjacent to the hotel.
"We have reduced the scope of work on this site, and we elected to not do that restaurant construction here," Kerns said. "Partially because of the kind of tenuous nature of some the excavation around the farmhouse."
The developers had been approved last year for a restaurant and patio area connected to the farmhouse. The project will now focus on developing the former Incarnation Church on Massachusetts Avenue as a restaurant with a kitchen farm.
The former Sunshine Pool property could also make way for overflow parking for both the Porches and Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art.
Instead of excavating 4,500 cubic yards of earth to accommodate a new building and parking near the farmhouse, Kerns said plans are to excavate just over 1,000 cubic yards.
He added that there are still plans to clean up behind the farmhouse although instead of going down a foot or two above the 100-year floodplain, they are only going down 6 feet.
"There is a lot of historic debris and garbage that is in that bank, along the top of the bank and we wanted to make sure that part of the work that we did was to remediate that," he said. "We will continue to do that, and it will create this kind of lower lawn."
The plans will still have to come before the commission for an official vote.
The commission also approved a request from Berkshire Gas to bring a gas main under Curran Highway that will ultimately provide increased pressure to the West End and Williamstown.
The commission also saw and approved a request from the city to install a water line in the Bradley Street area and extend a sewer line that residents around the lake can tap into.
The city is doing this to eliminate septic systems and reduce bacteria and infiltration into Windsor Lake.
The Conservation Commission also gave the Brooklyn Street Alliance the go-ahead to remove some invasive species from a 230-foot stretch of Wheeler Brook.
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Blue Vista Motor Lodge Brings Hospitality & View to Guests
By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff
Among the upgrades at the renovated lodge is a sauna to refresh after a day of skiing and hiking.
FLORIDA, Mass. — The Blue Vista Motor Lodge is still bringing hospitality to the town of Florida — even 100 years, many owners, names, and renovations later.
"When we were working on renovation plans, we found a postcard online from 1923 from the Whitcomb Summit Motor Lodge so that's kind of exciting that for over 100 years, people have been coming here and I think you can see why," owner Stella Downie said.
It all started with a small shack on Whitcomb Summit offering souvenirs and drinks that opened up with the highway in 1914. With growing popularity along the scenic byway, small cottages were built for motorists to stay on the Mohawk Trail's highest point.
Unfortunately, in 1938, the store and a restaurant burned and the cottages started to get run down. In the 1960s, the cottages were replaced with the current building, named Whitcomb Summit Lodge.
There were attempts to rejuvenate the summit for tourism over the preceding decades that fell by the wayside — from campgrounds and timeshares to fine dining and condominiums.
Downie purchased the building in December 2021, renovated the lodge in 2022 with a soft opening that fall, and officially opened in early 2023.
"We really wanted to clean it up and make it a beautiful place again for people to come and visit and really highlight the views," she said.
When Downie took over the property, she said it needed fixes and moving around. She took down all of the bordering dilapidated buildings that had long been abandoned, including the shuttered restaurant, to enhance the grounds.
The Blue Vista Motor Lodge is still bringing hospitality to the town of Florida — even 100 years, many owners, names, and renovations later. click for more
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