North Adams School Project Awards $51M Bid

By Tammy Daniels iBerkshires Staff
Print Story | Email Story
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The School Building Committee has awarded the Greylock School project to Fontaine Bros. Inc. of Springfield. 
 
Mayor Jennifer Macksey said she could "breathe a little better" with a bid contract that comes in nearly $2 million under budget.
 
The committee approved a bid of $50,498,544 on Thursday night that includes two alternates — the rebuild of the Appalachian Trail kiosk and the relocation and reconstruction of the baseball field. 
 
"I will say, all in all, for us to have overall the number of bidders that we had interested in our project, and especially to receive the GC bids that we did, the team Colliers and TSKP certainly did a good job attracting people to us," she said. "But this project ... really shows the testament of the good work that Colliers and TSKP and all of you have been doing throughout this process."
 
Fontaine had the low bid between Brait Builders of Marshfield and J&J Contractors Inc. of North Billerica.
 
The project had been bid out at $52,250,000 with three alternates: moving the ballfield, the kiosk and vertical geothermal wells. 
 
Committee members asked Timothy Alix of Collier's International, the owner's project manager, about his impressions of the bidders. He was most familiar with Fontaine, having worked with the company on a half-dozen school projects and noted it was the contractor on the Mountain View Elementary School in Easthampton that the Massachusetts School Building Authority has held up as an example school. He also had some of his colleagues call on projects that he had not personally worked on. 
 
"They're a quality firm. They do a good job. The changes are reasonable and fair," he said. "If they have an issue, they'll work with you, and with an open dialog, I have only good things to say about that."
 
He has not worked with J&J but it came through the prequalification process with no red flags and Brait he'd worked with as well, and considered it the type to push to keep things moving on a project. As to the subbidders, Colliers has worked with many of them and they, too, went through the prequalification process.  
 
The geothermal heating system, being pushed by the state, is expected to be partially funded by the federal government. Initial estimates for a vertical system came in almost double the $2.4 million earmarked in federal funding from the Inflation Reduction Act. 
 
A year ago, the building committee switched to a horizontal system that will be 20 to 30 feet under the new parking lot at an estimated at $1.5 million. The vertical system was kept as an alternate in bidding at about an extra $226,000.
 
"We did include an alternate for a vertical system to kind of check, because the horizontal system was something that we haven't done before," said Jesse Saylor of TSKP Studio, the project designer. "It's a little bit newer technology for geothermal, and we weren't sure we were going to encounter bidders and a favorable pricing, even though our research was showing that it should be less expensive for this site."
 
He said the difference was in the drilling technology; rather than drilling down, the drilling will be horizontal and not disturb the surface. 
 
Committee members Benjamin Lamb and David Moresi questioned the efficacy of the horizontal system, asking if that had been followed up on.
 
"We want the system to last a really long time, we want it to be able to accommodate the full buildings operations. Is there an efficiency issue from one to another?" asked Lamb.
 
Moresi asked if Saylor had worked on any similar projects and if it had been vetted. 
 
"From our perspective, the systems are providing equivalent performance to North Adams and have similar longevity," Saylor said, adding they have been used extensively in Canada. 
 
"We were more concerned about the number of bidders that you'd have, because there's a pretty large market of vertical well drillers at this point in the state, but there aren't as many horizontal drillers," he said. 
 
Moresi wasn't convinced, saying there had been a lot of issues with bigger projects in the area that have implemented new technologies. 
 
"I mean, there's another project recently, and I asked the OPM to maybe make some phone calls and do a little due diligence," he said. "I really feel that things like this need to be vetted, because the last thing the school wants to deal with his issues."
 
Saylor said he could reach out to Williams College, which is also putting in a geothermal system for the new art museum and ran into the same problems with the aquifer that Greylock had. 
 
The vote for the bid approval included a statement for more research into the horizontal system and a recognition that a rebid of the electrical required a change order. 
 
The vote was unanimous and followed by applause, with Moresi abstaining because of his relationship to subbidder Adams Plumbing and Heating. 
 
Alix said some process issues with the bidding, including the rebid of the electric, pushed out the deadline slightly. Work is expected to start at the end of the month with completion in July 2027. 

Tags: bidding,   Greylock School Project,   

If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Letter: Let's Prioritize Investment in Public Education in Massachusetts

Letter to the Editor

To the Editor:

Across the 1st Berkshire District, our schools face a unique set of challenges. Declining enrollment, rising transportation costs, workforce shortages, increasing special education expenses, and growing student mental health needs are placing significant pressure on local districts and taxpayers alike.

We need to continue to strengthen the connections between our primary schools, higher education institutions, career training programs, and local employers so that more young people can build successful futures right here in the Berkshires. Whether it's early college programming that has been spearheaded and highly successful right here in the 1st Berkshire District with MCLA, new trades training like the HVAC program at McCann, or the high demand certifications and trainings in healthcare now being built and operated at BCC, MCLA, and within our K-12 system. Each of these represents an example of how we do things well right here in our region, and lays the groundwork for how we can continue to advance educational support.

A strong public education system is directly connected to housing, childcare, transportation, workforce development, and economic opportunity. If we want to retain young families, attract new residents, and build a stronger regional economy, we must continue investing in educational excellence at every level.

I support continued and enhanced investment in public education, career and technical education, and early childhood education. I also support policies that recognize the unique challenges facing rural and small-city districts, particularly around transportation funding, the imbalance of special education costs and state funding formulas, and educator recruitment and retention. When local students' needs change, we need to be aggressive in advocating and designing policies that remain agile to the cost-of-service impacts and be willing to change existing practices such as the Chapter 70 funding formula. Together, we need to foster a culture of equitable education investment that lifts up our students and families, not one that measures their value based on standardized tests that have proven to be determined more heavily by median household income, and not the quality of our educators, the commitment of our students or the support of our communities.

Every student deserves a pathway to success, whether that pathway leads to a college classroom, a skilled trade, military service, entrepreneurship, or a career right here in the Berkshires. As your State Representative, I will work collaboratively with educators, families, school leaders, higher education institutions, workforce partners, and state agencies to make sure that the Berkshires have a strong voice in shaping the future of education policy in Massachusetts, and will ensure that our communities get the tailored support we need and deserve.

Sincerely,

Andrew Fitch
North Adams, Mass. 

Candidate for state representative, 1st Berkshire District

 

 

 

View Full Story

More North Adams Stories