The Gordman's sign is still up on the largely empty department store building off Main Street. A realty company has purchased the entire plaza for $2 million.
Former Kmart Plaza Sold to Connecticut Realty Company
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The Steeple City Plaza was sold last month to a Connecticut realty company for $2 million.
NRT Realty LLC of Avon, Conn., closed on the parcel on April 28, according to records at the Registry of Deeds. The manager is identified as N. Robert Trigg of Avon; a phone number listed for Trigg was not in service.
Thomas Krens had indicated interest in purchasing the former the Kmart plaza as a site for his Extreme Model Railroad and Contemporary Architecture Museum. The offices for the proposed museum are located on the Main Street side of the L-shaped mall.
The potential for using that location had been part of a presentation to downtown business owners and the mayor more than a year ago but it's not clear if that is still in the works. EMRCAM had initially been planned for Western Gateway Heritage State Park and there had been talk about it shifting southward toward the old Sons of Italy and the now closed Apkin scrapyard.
The more than 7-acre site on Main Street includes the L-shaped mall along Main and American Legion Drive and the former 93,000 square-foot Kmart building, which currently houses V&V liquors, a Rent a Center and a Planet Fitness.
First Hartford Realty of Manchester, Conn., bought the plaza in 2005 for $10.58 million, three years after Kmart had closed its operations there. The realty company deals in commercial development, shopping centers and multifamily housing.
First Hartford brought in a number of stores to fill the vacant department store, including Peebles, Olympic Sports, a small Sears store and Staples. The company's owner Neil Ellis had been interested in commercial development of North Adams since urban renewal in the late 1960s.
Over the past decade, Staples moved out and the liquor store moved in, Peebles was briefly replaced by a Gordmans that closed in 2020 only a few months after opening, Olympia and Sears shuttered and the North Adams Cinemas closed earlier this year. Ellis had kept the movie theater afloat for years after it moved into the east end of the building.
The L-shaped mall has had a number of tenant changes over the years and it currently houses longtime tenant Papa Gino's, a dollar store, Label Shopper, T-Mobile and an H-R Block. A Greylock Federal Credit Union drive-up and Burger King are located in separate buildings.
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North Adams Students Support Hometown Heroes Banner Program
By Jack GuerinoiBerkshires Staff
Drury High civics students Olivia Irace, Gabriella Packard and Paige Burdick spearheaded the project for their class.
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Local veterans are being honored through a cross-high school collaboration, with McCann Technical School CAD students manufacturing custom hardware for veteran banners and Drury High School civics students building a digital archive to preserve the veterans' legacies.
"It is super exciting for me," Veterans Agent Kurtis Durocher said. "It saves us money, and more importantly, it gets students involved. You really can't put a value on that."
The Veterans Services Department plans to install the banners downtown to honor local service members. The project was well underway last year; however, the old brackets used to hang banners on city light posts were in poor condition.
Durocher reached out to McCann Superintendent James Brosnan last fall, hoping the school could assist.
"I asked if it was something they would be interested in. We needed these brackets, and I thought it would be a great project for the students," Durocher said. "Jim, being a veteran himself, jumped on it. So within two weeks, we had a meeting."
Durocher needed 100 brackets to support banners for 50 veterans. He noted that the students saved his department nearly $6,500, with McCann supplying all the necessary materials.
While the new brackets are similar to the ones currently on Main Street, the design has been significantly improved. Computer assisted design (CAD) instructor Joshua Meczywor said students reverse-engineered the existing hardware to create a sturdier version.
The banners will feature ground-level QR codes that link directly to the student-produced website. To build the content, the class generated a list of questions to connect with local families.
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In a matter of days, Label Shopper in the L-shaped mall moved across the parking lot into new quarters and hung out a grand opening sign. click for more
The School Committee on Tuesday voted to send a recommending fiscal 2027 budget to a public hearing and congratulated the newest recipient of the Superintendent's Award.
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Mayor Jennifer Macksey updated the Finance Committee on Tuesday about some of the work being planned, including Berkshire Gas' plans to replace pipes along West Main Street.
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School officials are looking at the elimination of three teaching assistants, prekindergarten for 3-year-olds and a two part-time positions to reduce the fiscal 2027 budget. click for more