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The former residence had been turned into offices, and in September 2023, a fire destroyed the wall of an adjoining two-car garage.

Haddad Subaru House to Be Demolished

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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PITTSFIELD, Mass.— The house hiding behind Subarus on East Street will soon be demolished.

On Monday, the Historical Commission voted to approve the demolition of 676 East St pending a site visit and additional interior photos.  The 1938 single family on Haddad Subaru's property had a fire two years ago. It will now be used for inventory space.

"Well, for starters, there was a fire in the wall of the garage, which made it so that repairing it and using it was somewhat costly," explained Bryan Siter of Foresight Land Services.

"But also as a car dealership, it's just not a very useful building for the dealership so they're looking to demolish it and then expand car storage, parking area, essentially."

The former residence had been turned into offices, and in September 2023, a fire destroyed the wall of an adjoining two-car garage. The damage could be seen around the one-story garage, which connects to the two-story Dutch colonial.

"It's gone through a number of owners until it was eventually part of Pete's Motors as their rental office and now it's been sitting pretty vacant for quite a while," Siter said.

Chair John Dickson observed that it looked like a "pretty healthy building" and commissioners wondered if there were any salvable historical elements inside.  While Siter will have to check with the owner, he said a tour and additional photos of the interior will likely be feasible.

Commission members pointed to the building's "interesting" architecture and its modernity for its time.


"It's a sweet house but in the current context, it doesn't really have much purpose," Matthew Herzberg said.

In other news, the century-old building on Berkshire Medical Center's property has been demolished after the commission's approval last month.  

The commission approved the demolition in 2015. The first floor has been in limited use since, but it is now unoccupied because it is "inhabitable." Coupled with surrounding changes, BMC decided it had no use for the structure.

Work is being done on both sides, as the hospital is undergoing renovations and the state Department of Transportation is overhauling the intersection of North Street and First Street.  Attorney Vicki Donahue explained that the state project will widen the road, encroaching farther to the front of the building and requiring "some significant regrading" and a change of the entrance.

The building hasn't been a home in 70 years and BMC has owned it since 1974.

Dr. Martin Dobelle, father of former Mayor Evan Dobelle, purchased the home in 1947 when he returned to Pittsfield after World War II. He lived and kept his practice there until renovating it in 1955 as a suite of doctor's offices. It was variously known as the Doctors or Physicians Building after that and became BMC's West Side Neighborhood Health Center in 1976.



 


Tags: demolition,   historic buildings,   

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Parole Granted to Pittsfield Man Sentenced for Killing Toddler Son

Staff Reports
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — A city man serving a life sentence for killing his 2-year-old son 43 years ago has been granted parole. 
 
According to the Boston Globe, the Parole Board on Monday voted to release Richard N. Mayes Jr., 78, to a halfway house.
 
Mayes was charged with beating his son to death in 1983 when he wouldn't eat. The child, Lawrence Richon, had received blows to his head, body, arms and legs. Mayes also told police he'd hit his son four times with a plastic baseball bat. 
 
According to media reports at the time, Mayes tried to resuscitate Lawrence when he later collapsed and cried to police that he did it when arrested. 
 
The boy was taken by life flight to Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, where he died from blood clots in his head. 
 
Mayes was found guilty of second-degree murder by a Superior Court jury and sentenced to life in state prison.
 
According to the Globe, Mayes had been denied parole five times previously but told the board he had been sober for three decades and had not had a disciplinary report in a dozen years. 
 
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