image description
Williams College's Towne Field House was closed in the spring because of structural issues.
image description
An area north of the college tennis courts on Southworth Street has been identified as the site of a temporary recreation facility.
Updated September 14, 2023 02:54PM

Williams College Plans Temporary Athletic Facility on North Campus

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
Print Story | Email Story

Williams has not discussed a timeline for the demolition of Towne Field House, which the college's strategic plan has identified to be replaced.

Updated on Sept. 14 to clarify that the new temporary recreation facility will be repurposed after the college accomplishes its goal to build a permanent new field house.

WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Williams College this week announced plans to build a temporary recreation facility on the north end of campus to fill the gap left by the closure of its Towne Field House.

 
President Maud Mandel mentioned the new athletic facility as part of a Monday email to the campus community.
 
"The facility, to be built north of the tennis courts, is already attracting alumni support," Mandel told members of the community. "The WEM Foundation and Jim Hield [Williams Class of 1977] gave $15 million to support a comprehensive program and site planning study, the construction of the new multi-purpose recreation facility and the eventual construction of an Athletics and Wellness Complex."
 
Towne Field House, home to the college's indoor track and field team, pre-season practices for spring sports and informal recreation, was closed in March when it was deemed to be structurally unstable.
 
The closure came a few months after the public unveiling of a comprehensive strategic plan for the Williams campus. That plan included, among other things, replacement of the field house with a new recreation facility.
 
On Monday afternoon, a college spokesperson explained that the $15 million from Hield and the Minnesota-based WEM Foundation will both help the college pay for a temporary replacement for Towne and support the effort to create a permanent solution on the south end of campus, across Latham Street from Weston Field.
 
Jim Reische wrote in an email that the donation will help build the planned facility on what is currently green space between the college tennis courts and facilities barn, do a site planning study for the current area around Towne, Lansing Chapman Rink and the facilities service building on Latham and, eventually, construct new athletics and wellness complex on Latham Street.
 
The college plans to install a pre-engineered metal building on the site near the tennis courts. It will include an indoor track and will accommodate both practices and competitions when completed, Reische said. The current estimate puts the footprint of the temporary facility at 54,700 square feet.
 
"The new Multipurpose Recreation Facility is intended as a temporary replacement for the field house," Reische wrote. "'Temporary' in this case could mean a number of years. Once the new, permanent field house is built, we'd then decide what to do with the temporary facility."
 
Reische said the college will not have the temporary facility in place in time for the 2023-24 winter sports season.
 
"We'll have to find alternate venues for at least this academic year," he said.
 
The college has not publicly discussed a timeline for the demolition of Town Field House.

Tags: Williams College,   

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

Williamstown Select Board OKs Cannabis, Cable Deals

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The Select Board on Monday voted to update its host community agreement with the one cannabis dealer in town and signed on to a new 10-year agreement with Spectrum to provide cable television service to residents.
 
The three-year HCA with Silver Therapeutics, which opened its doors in the Williamstown Shopping Plaza in 2019, lapsed some time ago, Town Manager Robert Menicocci told the board, but the town and the retailer were waiting for new guidance from the state's Cannabis Control Commission.
 
"We were a little concerned with putting together host agreements kind of mid-air while [the CCC was] telegraphing changes they were going to make in terms of impact fees and the nature of what our host agreement needs to be like," Menicocci said. "We have been waiting and waiting on them for some time to draft what was promised to us of a model host agreement.
 
"And we wanted to give ourselves a little more time to digest that model host agreement, because there were some concerns municipalities had raised in general around what the commission had put forward."
 
Menicocci said that when early adopters, like Williamstown, formed the first HCAs in the wake of 2016's state referendum decriminalizing pot, there was more autonomy for municipalities. Now the CCC is attempting to create a structured regulatory environment similar to that in place for alcohol licenses.
 
Silver Therapeutics needs to renew its state license in December, prompting the town to renew the local agreement that retailers need to have in place, Menicocci said.
 
"We feel it's reasonable to move ahead with the host agreement at this point — continue to work with [Josh Silver], continue to work with our Legislature around the refinements that will come out of the control commission," Menicocci said.
 
View Full Story

More Williamstown Stories