[MassHistPres] Need help saving bldg in LHD
Garrett Laws
glaws at hbuilders.net
Wed Apr 26 10:46:01 EDT 2006
The old DEM had a historic curatorship program that did just that!
There are many of us out there that would love to take part in that kind of
effort giving the right factors.
Sorry, Weymouth is out of our service area, but I would assume that there
would be someone in your area interested in the opportunity.
Garrett Laws
The Copper & Slate Company
Waltham, MA
-----Original Message-----
From: masshistpres-bounces at cs.umb.edu
[mailto:masshistpres-bounces at cs.umb.edu]On Behalf Of Marcia Starkey
Sent: Sunday, April 23, 2006 4:18 PM
To: Massachusetts Historical Preservation interests
Subject: Re: [MassHistPres] Need help saving bldg in LHD
If the building can receive an occupancy permit, and the goal is to have it
used, why not offer free use to any party who would follow the historic
curatorship model under a new HSR if the current assessment isn't
trustworthy? Would the town agree to this? I may have missed the relevant
details. Marcia Starkey, Greenfield
----- Original Message -----
From: <Robtsyoung at aol.com>
To: <Masshistpres at cs.umb.edu>
Sent: Saturday, April 22, 2006 10:33 AM
Subject: [MassHistPres] Need help saving bldg in LHD
> Colleagues,
>
> The Sharon Historical Commission seeks help (and advice). We have a
> (potentially) spectacular Colonial Revival building sitting in the center
> of town
> that has been abandoned by the school department and then subsequent
> boards of
> selectmen since 1981. In 2004 Town Meeting, in an effort to both save
> the
> building from further decay and to encourage the Selectmen to take action,
> we
> overwhelmingly supported an Article to create a new Local Historic
> District
> which included this building, known as The Charles R. Wilber School
> (Wilber
> School), a Queen Anne style former school now being used as units of low
> income
> family housing, and a public park.
>
> At issue is the Wilber School. Originally built in 1921 and with a 1927
> addition which won national recognition for the best architechture of a
> public
> building in the nation, it has been used as a high school, and
> intermediate
> school, a middle school and an elementary school. It was also the sight
> of many
> public forums and meetings it is in the heart of our community. Each
> year
> that passes the building has been subjected to external and internal
> decay.
> It was sold and bought back in the early 1990's in a failed attempt to
> build
> assisted living, and only recently has the community committed to voting
> to
> spend monies to "button up" the building and/or abate hazardous
> materials.
>
> Within months of our triumph in creating the LHD the Selectmen appointed
> the
> Wilber Reutilization Committee to explore opportunities as to what could
> be
> done with the building. Though this committed group worked very hard for
> nearly two years, they stopped all plans a couple of months ago when a
> report
> which they ordered to be done by the Standing Building Committee came back
> from
> an architechtural firm. Giving three scenarios with three costs in
> ascending order: A) abatement and stabilization; B) abatement and
> demolition; C)
> abatement and partial demolition shoring up the significant facade facing
> S.
> Main Street and the firm suggesting that the better alternative is
> complete
> demolition, the Wilber Reutilization Committee voted 10 to 1 to inform
> the
> Selectmen that they favored demolition of the Wilber School.
>
> In the three weeks that have ensued the Mass. Historical Commission has
> advised us that the building should not be demolished due to its
> protection under
> the Historic Districts Act and our Commission voted no to demolition.
> Four
> or five other town boards also favor demolition and the Town Counsel has
> written to Selectmen saying that while the Historic District Commission
> DOES have
> authority over the building, it can be overridden if the Building
> Inspector
> feels that, due to public safety, the building should be demolished. The
> building has been secured (though there is no protective fence around it)
> for at
> least 20 years.
>
> MHC, even in the face of the legal opinion by Town Counsel, maintains that
> demolition should not be an option. We have opinions from other
> architects
> saying that the building can be restored, we have spoken with developers
> who
> have indicated interest in bidding on an RFP (though none has been sent
> out by
> the Wilber Reutilization Committee, they have agreed to do so to see if
> there
> really is any interest). My problem is that Town Meeting is in one week.
> In a Special TM there is an Article requesting that the voters allocate
> the
> funds for abatement and demolition and the Finance Committee
> recommendation (to
> be made at TM), while in favor, is hinged upon a legal opion from Town
> Counsel and a report from the Building Inspector - and you already know
> where that
> is going.
>
> Any suggestions as to the best way to handle this? Does anyone know of
> legal consel that would be willing to work with us pro bono? We have an
> annual
> budget of $650.
>
> Robert Young
> Acting Chair
> Sharon Historical Commission and Historic District Commission
> _______________________________________________
> MassHistPres mailing list
> MassHistPres at cs.umb.edu
> http://mailman.cs.umb.edu/mailman/listinfo/masshistpres
>
_______________________________________________
MassHistPres mailing list
MassHistPres at cs.umb.edu
http://mailman.cs.umb.edu/mailman/listinfo/masshistpres
More information about the MassHistPres
mailing list