The hulk of a building that would have dominated this frame is gone
After the High School renovation/expansion was completed circa 1996, the classrooms transformed into administrative office space, but they lacked basic amenities -- like bathrooms -- and required expensive overhead: $10,000 annually, mostly for electricity.
Employees have now retreated back into the main building.
Meanwhile our pristine never-actually-used-as-classrooms modular unit near the decommissioned Mark's Meadow Elementary School (now returned to UMass) sits unwanted behind the School of Education.
UMass always owned the Mark's Meadow building, but the town --at the exuberant urging of a pre Catherine Sanderson School Committee -- added the stand alone modular classrooms in 2007 at a cost of $220,000.
Mark's Meadow modular "classrooms" now abandoned but still owned by Amherst
The building consists of two class rooms, two rest rooms, two closets, a data closet and custodial closet and an independent heating and cooling systems allowing it to be a stand alone building. But unfortunately, as such, would require a whopping investment to properly move and reassemble it elsewhere: A cost approaching what the town originally paid for it.
Maybe UMass would allow the building to stay where it is and become a homeless shelter? The current shelter at the Baptist Church, located at the edge of campus, is too small and needs separate facilities for women. The cost to renovate the modular where it is would be far cheaper than trying to move it.
The Amherst Community Development Block Grant committee just happens to have a spare $200,000 leftover from last year's appropriation they need to put to good use. And the CDBG advisory committee unanimously voted to address "Homeless and Sheltering" as their number one priority for this upcoming year.
Plus it could be a good learning experience for UMass students to interact with those less fortunate souls down on their luck, who struggle with substance abuse. Unlike our weekend party hardy types, who think they have it all under control.
The building consists of two class rooms, two rest rooms, two closets, a data closet and custodial closet and an independent heating and cooling systems allowing it to be a stand alone building. But unfortunately, as such, would require a whopping investment to properly move and reassemble it elsewhere: A cost approaching what the town originally paid for it.
Maybe UMass would allow the building to stay where it is and become a homeless shelter? The current shelter at the Baptist Church, located at the edge of campus, is too small and needs separate facilities for women. The cost to renovate the modular where it is would be far cheaper than trying to move it.
"Homeless and Hungry" woman Amherst town center
The Amherst Community Development Block Grant committee just happens to have a spare $200,000 leftover from last year's appropriation they need to put to good use. And the CDBG advisory committee unanimously voted to address "Homeless and Sheltering" as their number one priority for this upcoming year.
Left: Nancy Gregg, Housing and Shelter Com Rep, Claude Tellier, Co-Chair CDBG Advisory Com
Plus it could be a good learning experience for UMass students to interact with those less fortunate souls down on their luck, who struggle with substance abuse. Unlike our weekend party hardy types, who think they have it all under control.