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The site at the corner of Union and Eagle streets is prepared for construction.

North Adams Starbucks Development Hits 'Pause' Button

By Tammy Daniels iBerkshires Staff
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NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The corner of Union and Eagle streets will be bare for a while longer as construction hits pause on a retail development that is to include Starbucks.  
 
"We are told, verbally, that the Starbucks project has been put on hold because they have new leadership, and the leadership is looking at all their existing stores before they continue with any new builds," said Mayor Jennifer Macksey at Tuesday's City Council meeting. "We hope to meet with Colvest in the next couple of weeks, I would say, the next three weeks, to discuss what their plans are."
 
Colvest Group of Springfield was approved last year to construct three buildings with four to six retail spaces, two drive-throughs and parking for 57 vehicles on the former St. Francis' Church site. It bought the property in 2018. 
 
The commercial real estate group has undertaken more than $1 million in work to level the corner, build a massive retaining wall below Colegrove Park Elementary School, install sidewalks and curb cuts and sewer and water infrastructure. 
 
Macksy said she's asked them to "button up the site," which has been done.
 
"The big world of what's going on on the site, that's what we've been told by the project engineer on that job," she said. "And we hope to have more details to follow in the upcoming weeks so I just wanted to publicly say that that's all we know."
 
Starbucks hired a new CEO, Brian Niccol, last year, who's been working on a turnaround for the company that seen declining sales and stock prices. Among those efforts is a redesign of the coffeeshops that was launched in May. 
 
The company had announced a slowdown in new construction and renovations to accommodate a new redesign after Niccol took over last year. Starbucks has more than 40,000 outlets globally. 
 
"We have seen our costs go way up on our new builds as well as our renovations," Niccol told investors during the fiscal 2025 second quarter conference call in April, adding as "we get the new design and build nailed down, we will ramp our way back up. ...
 
"We still believe there's tremendous opportunity to double the store count from where we are today. I just want to double it with the right build at the right cost so that we can provide the right customer experience and the right partner experience."
 
Niccol had been head of Chipotle, which has been rumored as one of the other food retailers planned for the site. 
 
Macksey said she didn't have much more information to provide but noted that at this point it was a delay, not a cancellation. 
 
"They did not use the words 'not coming,'" she said. "They used the word 'pause.'"

Tags: coffeeshop,   commercial development,   economic development,   

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North Adams Worked the Weekend Fixing Water Line Breaks

Staff Reports iBerkshires
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The Water Department and Department of Public Works have been responding since Friday to multiple water line breaks throughout the city that are causing temporary loss of water in some areas. 
 
"Everyone has water or very low pressure," said Mayor Jennifer Macksey, as of Sunday evening. "We're asking people to just conserve as much as they can. Once the system gets in balance, everything will come back, but we've got to fix them."
 
The first break occurred Friday in the field behind the water filtration plant, which was difficult to access. That repair was completed on Sunday morning. 
 
"Then we started at 3:30 this morning on American Legion Drive," she said. "We dad to wait a few hours for Dig Safe, which slowed us down, and they're still over there, still trying to make the repair.
 
"Then about, probably, I would say, eight o'clock [Sunday morning]. We were called to Carr Hardware, where we had another bubble, another break. I don't know if we'll get to that break tonight. The guys are very tired, it's cold, it's unsafe."
 
Crews have been working in frigid temperatures trying to find where the lines are broken and fix them. The loss of the main line caused a drop in pressure, and the pressure changes are causing more breaks. 
 
Commissioner of Public Services Timothy Lescarbeau was able to assess and get the first break fixed, she said, "but now it's regulating the system and that, coupled with the cold weather, is working against us tonight, but the team has been great. 
 
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