Home About Archives RSS Feed

What If: Engineer a New Use for North Adams Hospital

By Paul HarschiBerkshires Columnist

What if there was actually an exciting new use for the existing hospital building?

What if BMC and decisionmakers determine that the present North Adams Regional Hospital structure is simply too large for the present and declining population in North Adams and Northern Berkshire?

Besides the difficult road to recovery for all of the displaced employees for whom we as a community will need to do our very best to help become either re-employed elsewhere within the region or re-trained for new opportunities, there would then be the enormous task of re-utilizing the existing hospital structure.

What if we as a community and as a county were to re-imagine something radically new, something so fresh and different that, like Mass MoCA which was, let's face it, at the time, an extraordinary dream of seeming impossibility, it could actually work?

Quite a few years back Peter Fohlin, the town manager from Williamstown, shared with me an idea I always thought brilliant and have since shared in conversations with a number of leaders in our area, an idea whose time may really have arrived if indeed it is determined the hospital as it is can no longer be justified due to its size and the changes in health delivery today.

The idea is to establish an engineering college here in the Berkshires.

Until now, the idea didn't appear to be taken too seriously or was treated as too far-fetched. But with the looming possibility facing us that the hospital could end up empty and even emergency services might have to move due to the way in which the utilities are all tied in together with the entire building, now may be the time — just like when Sprague left.

What is needed when something as huge as the closure of the hospital is upon us is not to wring our hands and throw in the towel but instead to think new, bold and affirmative ideas. Out of every seeming problem is invariably an opportunity and quite possibly now is the time to seize upon this idea which has lain dormant and to run with it.

Boston has a state engineering school as does Worcester. North Adams has MCLA, Williamstown has Williams College and to build upon the educational and arts orientation of the northern area the  addition of a state engineering school could be the shot in the arm (pun intended) that is needed with the closure of the hospital.

Others may have alternative suggestions but I can't think of another possible use that could bring more high paying jobs, more general employment and more income to the area than an engineering college and the spinoffs would be equally impressive. Such a school would not only help stem the tide of population decline due to the aging of the baby boomer generation in general but would bring youth and revitalization to the area so badly needed.

One need only look over the mountain at Northampton as an example of how much vitality and prosperity is brought to an area from education. Mass MoCA for all its extraordinary qualities primarily brings temporary visitor traffic. An engineering school would bring permanent change and activity and help rebuild our communities and local economy.

The hospital building, if re-utilized for an engineering school, might also be able to accommodate the emergency services area without disrupting that from the present location. The two uses could be entirely compatible. In fact it could even be quite feasible to reconfigure the hospital down to a manageable size, a fraction of what it now is, so that the city could in fact maintain a small local hospital alongside this proposed engineering school.

Peter Fohlin's idea may well have found its right time and place in the form of an engineering school in place of the hospital. What could be more vital in today’s world than a place to educate the nation's future for the needs and world of the future.

I put this out therefore to the public and to leaders and decision makers to discuss, on the local, regional and state level. We cannot allow this extraordinary event and the opportunity it presents to slip through our hands. The time is now to focus not just on the loss but more importantly, too, on the opportunity to transform the loss into something even better.

Paul Harsch, president and founder of Harsch Associates, a Berkshire County based real estate brokerage firm, is a licensed real estate broker in Massachusetts, New York and Vermont, serving a diverse residential, business, commercial and land client base for 40 years.

     

Support Local News

We show up at hurricanes, budget meetings, high school games, accidents, fires and community events. We show up at celebrations and tragedies and everything in between. We show up so our readers can learn about pivotal events that affect their communities and their lives.

How important is local news to you? You can support independent, unbiased journalism and help iBerkshires grow for as a little as the cost of a cup of coffee a week.

News Headlines
MassDOT: South County Construction Operations
Holiday Hours: Christmas & New Year's
Ventfort Hall Gilded Age Mansion Opens for the Holiday Season
MassWildlife: Avoid Decorating With Invasive Plants
NTIA Approves $14.1M to Boost Statewide Digital Equity
North Adams Holds First Veterans' Christmas Breakfast
Big Lots to Close Pittsfield Store
McCann and Taconic Awarded CTI Grants
Guest Column: An Honor to Serve
Puppeteer To Present 'Little Red Riding Hood' At Ventfort Hall

Paul Harsch, president and founder of Harsch Associates, a Berkshire County based real estate brokerage firm, is a licensed real estate broker in Massachusetts, New York and Vermont, serving a diverse residential, business, commercial and land client base for 40 years. He has achieved personal career sales exceeding $131 million and company sales from 1979 will top $500 million in 2014. Harsch is a member of the Berkshire, Massachusetts, Southwestern Vermont and National associations of realtors, is a licensed Massachusetts real estate instructor and earned the CRB, CRS, GRI and CBI designations. Harsch is a 1969 graduate of Williams College.

To submit comments, questions or requests for future blog topics write him at paul@harschrealestate.com.



Categories:
Adams Real Estate (2)
Adams Real Estate (0)
Berkshire home for sale (2)
Berkshire property for sale (2)
buying (9)
buying a home in the berkshires (1)
home buyer (0)
home buyer (0)
home buyer (0)
home owner (6)
homes for sale in the berkshires (3)
Lenox Real Estate (2)
Monterey Real Estate (2)
Monterey Real Estate (1)
Otis Real Estate (1)
Pittsfield Real Estate (2)
real estate (11)
second home (2)
selling (10)
selling a home in the berkshires (2)
Stockbridge real estate (2)
The Berkshires (2)
williamstown real estate (2)
Archives:
Tags:
Home Inspection Homes For Sale In The Berkshires Berkshire County Homes Narh Berkshire County Real Estate Interest Rates Home Sellers Attorney Home & Garden Real Estate For Sale Williamstown Medical Investment Million-dollar Sales Williamstown Ma Real Estate Berkshire County Real Estate Berkshires Properties Home For Sale In The Berkshires Second Home Legal Opinions Williamstown Ma Housing Market Home Buyers The Berkshires Boston Engineering Trends Building Inspector The Patriots Home Financing
Popular Entries:
Facilitator, Transaction Broker Agent or Unrepresented?
The Berkshires Aren't Boston
The Best Small Town in America
For Sale By Owner: Homes for sale in the Berkshires
Real Estate Perspective 2013-2014
High End Sales, Williamstown and Berkshire County
Come Home to the Berkshires | Berkshire County, Mass.
Selling or Buying Real Estate Is Just Like Buying a Loaf of Bread
How will your Berkshire property value fare in 2015 and beyond?
What If: Engineer a New Use for North Adams Hospital
Recent Entries:
The Berkshires Aren't Boston
How will your Berkshire property value fare in 2015 and beyond?
Be A Contrarian
Come Home to the Berkshires | Berkshire County, Mass.
For Sale By Owner: Homes for sale in the Berkshires
The Best Small Town in America
The Froth Is Off
Do You Want to List Your property or Sell it?
The Home-Buying Process in 12 Easy (?) Steps
Selling or Buying Real Estate Is Just Like Buying a Loaf of Bread