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Maria Sekowski is closing her store, Maria's European Delights, after nine years on North Street.

Maria's European Delights To Close in Pittsfield

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The smell of homemade soup, stuffed cabbage, and kielbasa fill the small yet lively Eastern European deli as patrons send Maria Sekowski off on her journey in retirement. 
 
Sekowski announced on her Facebook page in early October that she would be closing her doors at the end of the year with plans to retire. 
 
Patrons expressed their congratulations but were greatly saddened by this loss to the community. Many customers said they are going to miss her welcoming and energetic personality. 
 
The curtains will close on Sekowski's impromptu musical numbers and karaoke sessions. Music by Frank Sinatra, Elvis Presley, Michael Bublé, and many others are fading and her new symphony into retirement begins. 
 
Although Sekowski is going to miss her customers she is looking forward to spending time with her family. She is making plans to visit her daughter, who lives now in Kansas City, Mo., and her brother in New Jersey.
 
Her son is also expecting another child so she plans on helping him take care of her grandson as well as continuing to fulfill her responsibilities as the legal guardian of a 12-year old.
 
Unless the store receives an offer to buy the business, there will be another empty storefront on North Street.
 
"The store will close unless there's someone that would be interested in buying the business," Sekowski said in the post. "I want to thank you all for supporting my business throughout the years. Please support your local small businesses as there are too many empty storefronts.
 
Although someone had inquired about purchasing the store, she had not heard back earlier last week so its fate is unclear.
 
Although the idea of saving the store from closure is nice, she said there is nothing drawing people to North Street aside from the few popular attractions. 
 
Foot traffic is not the only obstacle North Street business owners have to face, she said. Parking is a major issue that drives away patrons who become frustrated and give up after being unable to find a space. 
 
Those who are able to find a parking space on North Street then have to avoid walking into the flowerbeds, she said. 
 
In December 2007, Sekowski's husband, Krzysztof "Kris" opened Maria's European Delights in Great Barrington after being let go from Rising Paper Co., where he worked as a beater operator for 20 years. 
 
During this time she continued working at Brazabra Corp. in Lee and would help out on weekends until May of 2008. She quit her job and joined him. 
 
The duo ran the restaurant together building relationships with customers and, in 2013, they moved the business to Pittsfield. 
 
Kris died a year later. Since then, Sekowski has been running the business on her own. 
 
"It would be nice if somebody had bought it and continued," she said but added it is a lot of work for a single person.
 
"[It would] be a nice thing for a couple. For one person that's, that's too much. Would be nice for a family and it would prevent another storefront from being empty on North Street."

 


Tags: store closings,   

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Pittsfield's Site 9 to See Mill Town Development

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

Tim Burke, CEO and director of Mill Town, speaks at Thursday's announcement about the development plans for the parcel. 

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Mill Town Capital is continuing its investment in the city by purchasing 4.7 acres of of the 16-acre Site 9, William Stanley Business Park's largest parcel.

Across the street at 100 Woodlawn Ave., the investment firm intends to build a mixed-use development that includes housing. This will be a far cry from the abandoned, moonscape-looking block that General Electric left behind.  

"Mill Town has had an interest in Site 9 since 2018. During this time, we have invested in it and developed over 200 units of housing in Pittsfield, with a particular focus on the Tyler Street Neighborhood," said Timothy Burke, CEO and managing director, at a press conference on Thursday morning.

"Our financial support is also extended to the Berkshire Innovation Center, the Tyler Street Lab, the Berkshire Dream Center, all the Tyler Street neighborhood, and numerous other regional nonprofit organizations. Overall, we have invested over $80 million in the region, addressing crucial needs and supporting local assets across various sectors and platforms, much of which is community driven."

The Pittsfield Economic Development Authority approved a letter of intent for the sale on Thursday — no price was discussed at this time — and over the next couple of months, it is expected to become a definitive purchase agreement.

Mill Town's vision includes evaluating the development of a commercial building upwards of 20,000 square feet to provide office and lab scape for growing local businesses.

"We've been having conversations with mostly local businesses for quite a while now and I think there is a lack of Class A office space out there for growing local companies so we have a group of companies that we're working with to define their needs," Burke said.

"And I think now that we're at this point where we can hopefully progress to the next step. We're going be looking to network with other businesses as well but I think our approach would be looking to secure local companies that are growing and looking to add jobs and running out of their current space and then potentially looking to add some capacity for companies that may be looking to start or move here from other locations but I think the first focus is on local businesses that we know, that we work with, that are already growing."

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