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A half-mile extension of the rail trail to Merrill Road should be completed this fall.

Pittsfield's 2nd Rail Trail Extension Coming Soon

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The second extension of the Ashuwillticook Rail Trail southward through the city is on schedule for completion in the fall.

This will connect the leg that comes out on Crane Avenue to Merrill Road, paving the way for further extensions. A paved parking lot and path can be seen from the road with construction elements on the site.

"The construction of the Pittsfield Rail Trail project began in October of 2023 and is expected to be completed on time in the fall," a representative from the Massachusetts Department of Transportation confirmed.

The 0.4-mile extension will go underneath the Dalton Avenue bridge, travel behind the Shops at Unkamet Brook (which include Dick's Sporting Goods, Raymour & Flanigan, and Panera Bread,) and come out next to O'Connell Oil Associates.

Coming in at about $2.35 million, MassDOT says the project is on budget. Eighty percent of the construction cost is paid by the Federal Highway Administration and 20 percent is funded by the state.

To accommodate the extension, a 5,900-square-foot paved parking area with 11 spaces will be built adjacent to the trail at Merrill Road.

Project activities include a rest area with bench seating, bicycle racks, and trail information; a Pedestrian Activated Hybrid Beacon (HAWK) signal at Merrill Road; repair of an existing stormwater drainage culvert underneath the existing rail embankment at one location; and new grass-lined infiltration swales parallel to the trail totaling a cumulative 1,150 linear feet.



During construction, crews encountered some contaminated soil but the project remained on schedule. One of eight soil sample conducted was found to have polychlorinated biphenyls and the contaminated soil was disposed of properly. Initially estimated at $1.65 million, the discovery of the contamination added $700,000 to the trail's price tag.

The next proposed phase of the rail trail is an approximately 1.5-mile extension along Merrill Road/Route 9 and it is expected to be advertised for construction in December 2027.

MassDOT said plans for further extensions have not been finalized.

In 2022, the city celebrated a finished 1.5-mile leg of the trial along the abandoned Housatonic railroad line that runs from the Connector Road to Crane Avenue. The 10-foot paved multi-use path is loved by walkers, bikers, and more.

The rail trail now runs more than 14 miles.

The first section opened in 2001 from Route 8 in Cheshire to Hoosac Street in Adams and was extended to Lime Street in 2016. The trail will eventually link up to a recently completed 2.4-mile path in Williamstown.


Tags: Ashuwillticook Rail Trail,   bike path,   

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SolaBlock Awarded State Grant

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Healey-Driscoll administration awarded SolaBlock  $204,835 to construct automated and modularized systems to build its Solar Masonry Units, which embed solar photovoltaics directly into a standard cement block. 
 
SolaBlock will partner with the Berkshire Innovation Center (BIC) to make the test chamber available to other members of the BIC. SolaBlock plans to add 17 new jobs with this grant investment. This project is aligned with the Manufacturing USA Institute CESMII.
 
The Healey-Driscoll administration announced $10,280,407 in grants to 13 companies to support sustainable alternatives to traditional manufacturing through the Massachusetts Manufacturing Innovation Initiative (M2I2), a program through MassTech Collaborative's (MassTech) Center for Advanced Manufacturing (CAM) that bridges the gap between innovation and commercialization by providing capital grants and supporting pioneering projects in emerging industries.
 
The Administration announced the grants during an event with Secretary of Economic Development Yvonne Hao and MassTech at Clean Crop Technologies in Holyoke, which is receiving a $1.2 million M2I2 grant to validate its innovative technology that removes contaminants from crops using less energy. This round of grants will support companies in key industries such as climate tech, bioindustrial manufacturing, and recyclable materials, and create an estimated 230 jobs.
 
"Massachusetts is home to the world's leading innovation economy thanks to our trailblazing manufacturing companies, cutting-edge universities and top talent," said Governor Maura Healey. "We are committed to investing in the pioneering R&D and infrastructure necessary to help our state maintain its status as a place where groundbreaking ideas translate to real-world solutions through programs like M2I2. We are pleased this round of grants will help fund sustainable innovations in the manufacturing industry."
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