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Brattleboro Celebrates Brooks House Reopening
Susan KeeseBrattleboro celebrated the reopening of an important downtown building Friday. The historic Brooks House was heavily damaged by fire in 2011. But now it’s back in business.
The 140 year old landmark, with its store fronts and ornate towers, stood vacant for three years after the fire. It left a big hole in Brattleboro’s downtown. The building cost $24 million to restore, significantly more than its listed value. The project was spearheaded by local investors, and financed through tax credits, grants, loans and government programs.
Gov. Peter Shumlin, who is from the Brattleboro area, pushed for Community College of Vermont and Vermont Technical College to become the building’s first tenants. The colleges opened in August. At the Grand Opening Friday, Shumlin praised area residents who committed to high-end apartments long before the building came together. He talked about the Brattleboro native who owned a restaurant in Colorado, but returned to open a new restaurant in the building where her mother once owned and operated a popular Brattleboro book store.
“The obstacles were tremendous. And everybody came together and said, “We will not take no for an answer!’” - Vermont Governor Peter Shumlin
“The obstacles were tremendous,” Shumlin told the crowd that gathered in atrium of the newly restored building. “And everybody came together and said, ‘We will not take no for an answer, we’ll use our imaginations, we’ll do things that have never been done before.’ It’s really a remarkable story.”
The building has a ground floor restaurant, a yogurt shop and several other businesses. All but one of its apartments have been rented.
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Project Gives Woodstock Church New Life
Julia Purdy“Building on Faith,” a project of Woodstock’s St. James Episcopal Church, has given the building a new lease on life. St. James rector, the Rev. Norm MacLeod, said the project addresses several infrastructure and code issues. He...
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Proctor Envisions Downtown Makeover
Dan ColtonPROCTOR—Municipal leaders want people to know Proctor is open for business — and they’ll be spreading that message Saturday during the Vermont Marble Museum’s grand reopening and townwide celebration. The Proctor Prosperity Plan has been designed...
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American Legion Building Demolition
Immediately following the Town of Middlebury’s Ground Break for the new Recreation Center on April 1st, demolition began on the old American Legion Building on Creek Road.
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Town of Middlebury New Recreation Center Ground Breaking
Middlebury, Vermont—A Ground Breaking Ceremony was held on April 1st for the new Recreation Center on Creek Road. Bread Loaf Corporation of Middlebury is providing Integrated Project Management services for design and construction of the new facility. ...
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Town of Middlebury New Town Offices Ground Breaking
Middlebury, Vermont—A Ground Breaking Ceremony was held on March 24th for the new Town Offices at 77 Main Street in Middlebury. Bread Loaf Corporation of Middlebury is providing Integrated Project Management services for design and construction of the...
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Welcome to The Neigborhood
NMH JournalA cluster of new homes has sprouted on the northern edge of campus, bringing more Northfield Mount Hermon teachers closer to students.
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Proctor Plan Envisions Transformed Downtown
Brent Curtis“Proctor has a really compact center with most residents in town living a quarter-mile away from the center,” Nebraska said. “It makes Proctor a truly walkable community.”
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Automaster Renovates BMW Showroom
Jeff PierceAutomaster Showroom The Automaster began a total renovation and expansion of their free-standing BMW showroom with deconstruction on Nov. 24. The total renovation includes stripping the existing building down to the structural steel and rebuilding a completely updated showroom,...
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