image description
Work is underway on the South Street hotel with a target opening of spring 2025. A tax exemption was first requested in 2021.

Pittsfield Holiday Inn Express Seeks Further TIF Extension

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
Print Story | Email Story

PITTSFIELD, Mass.— The COVID-19 pandemic's effect on construction costs continues to delay an upcoming Holiday Inn Express.

On Tuesday's City Council agenda is a request to amend a tax increment financing agreement between the city and Somnath LLC, initially approved in 2021. The company is seeking a second two-year extension because of higher construction costs, supply chain disruptions, and the need to secure additional financing.

"Remember, all these businesses that get a TIF pay taxes and in the case of this hotel, once they're open there will be hotel, motel taxes that the city will be receiving as well," Mayor Peter Marchetti said on his biweekly television show One Pittsfield on Monday.

"So it's important to help businesses out as we go along to be able to help the city out too."

The new hotel is expected to create between 25-30 jobs, 15 of them full-time positions.

In 2022, the city approved a two-year extension for the TIF that would will forgive about $755,000 in real estate taxes while generating more than $1.27 million in tax revenue. The original build was estimated at $10 million and has been inflated to over $13 million.

Still, representatives Mauer and Dilip Desai expect for the hotel to open in the spring. Located behind the former Dakota Steakhouse, construction is well underway.

Marchetti said the family is well established in the community, having successfully owned and operated several hotels in Pittsfield and the surrounding area including the Best Western Plus on West Housatonic Street.

"We are requesting this extension as our original groundbreaking date and hotel opening date have been pushed back due to the COVID-19 pandemic,"  Mauer Desai wrote to the city.

"Increased construction cost and issues with the supply chain for delivery of materials pushed the start of the construction back. We were forced to seek additional financing to begin construction which resulted in a delayed groundbreaking. The construction is now underway, and we are confident in a spring of 2025 opening."


Also on the agenda is a proposed amendment to the city code's chapter on tax title agreements and an order of permanent taking by eminent domain of two parcels on Wahconah Street in connection with the Bel Air Dam.

Marchetti explained that the ordinance change is due to recent changes to the foreclosure and tax title process made by the state Legislature and signed by Gov. Maura Healey.

"The down payment requirement will now change from having to have a 25 percent down payment to a 10 percent down payment," he said.

"The maximum length of the agreement is increasing to 10 years from 5 and the percentage of interest allowed to be waived increases from 50 percent to 100 percent as determined by the municipality."

The requests for permanent taking on Wahconah Street is for the demolition of the Bel Air Dam.

Last year, $20 million in American Rescue Plan Act dollars were allocated to remove the deteriorating, potentially deadly dam on Wahconah Street. It has been an area of concern for more than a decade, with the city and the state Department of Conservation and Recreation conducting inspections, maintenance, and repairs. In 2020, it was identified as a high-priority project.

"For nearly 20 years, city staff have been concerned about the deteriorating state of the Bel Air Pond dam after local owner withdrew from their responsibility for maintenance and upkeep. Working closely with the Mass Office of Dam Safety, the city has been monitoring the structure and providing local support as needed," Marchetti explained.

"In 2019 an assessment of options was performed and it was determined that the best course of action was to seek wholesale removal of the structure."

Design engineering has been occurring since last year and environmental permits are nearly secured for removal of the dam and about 35,000 cubic yards of contaminated materials.

"For this project to proceed into construction the two parcels that make up the project site must be in local control," the mayor said.


Tags: motels, hotels,   tax exemption,   

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

Big Lots to Close Pittsfield Store

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Two major chains are closing storefronts in the Berkshires in the coming year.
 
Big Lots announced on Thursday it would liquidate its assets after a purchase agreement with a competitor fell through. 
 
"We all have worked extremely hard and have taken every step to complete a going concern sale," Bruce Thorn, Big Lots' president and CEO, said in the announcement. "While we remain hopeful that we can close an alternative going concern transaction, in order to protect the value of the Big Lots estate, we have made the difficult decision to begin the GOB process."
 
The closeout retailer moved into the former Price Rite Marketplace on Dalton Avenue in 2021. The grocery had been in what was originally the Big N for 14 years before closing eight months after a million-dollar remodel. Big Lots had previously been in the Allendale Shopping Center.
 
Big Lots filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in September. It operated nearly 1,400 stores nationwide but began closing more than 300 by August with plans for another 250 by January. The Pittsfield location had not been amount the early closures. 
 
Its website puts the current list of stores at 960 with 17 in Massachusetts. Most are in the eastern part of the state with the closest in Pittsfield and Springfield. 
 
Advanced Auto Parts, with three locations in the Berkshires, is closing 500 stores and 200 independently owned locations by about June. 
 
View Full Story

More Pittsfield Stories