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Jones Block owner David LaBorde cuts the ribbon on the renovated property. The
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Each unit has an open space plan for kitchen, dining and living.
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Both two-bedroom apartments are in the back of the building and feature large bathrooms and laundry rooms.
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Each floor also has a one-bedroom unit and a one bedroom with an extra room that could be used as an office.
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The plans were first proposed in 2007. All units have at least one and a half baths.
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The curved glass entrance to the lobby was installed in 2008.
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Adams' Jones Block Finally Ready for Tenants After 3 Decades

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
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Attendees on the second floor landing of the historic building. 
ADAMS, Mass. — The long-vacant Jones Bock on Park Street is finally ready for tenants. 
 
Owner and developer David LaBorde hosted an open house on Friday night to show off the newly completed apartments on the second and third floors; the ground floor will be prepared for occupation by the central office of Hoosac Valley Regional School District. 
 
LaBorde said he was taken by the town after a walk down Park Street a few years ago. 
 
"Adams is really the last frontier in Berkshire County," he joked. 
 
The reception included a ribbon cutting on the second floor landing of the contemporary staircase with Selectmen Chair Christine Hoyt and Selectman John Duval holding the "grand opening" red ribbon.
 
"This is really a wonderful moment here for the town of Adams and thank you for all that you have done and being a wonderful partner," said Hoyt. 
 
"We're thrilled to have six units coming online," she continued as Town Administrator Jay Green interjected that the units were "market rate."
 
"Any vibrant downtown today that you see now in the 21st century has a mix — it's mix of small businesses, it's a mix of housing and we're seeing that come here in Adams," said Green, who then referred to investments including those at 57 Park St. and the Adams Theater. "Thank you not only for coming to Adams but believing in our community."
 
Minus a few finishing details, the six apartments feature open plan spaces with plenty of windows and light, new kitchens and appliances and master suites. Rents range from $1,350 to $1,800 a month and Bishop West Real Estate is handling the rentals. 
 
LaBorde said it was 25 months to complete the project — at least on his end. Several plans have been made and abandoned for the historic block over the years since a fire in 1996 damaged the hardware store on the first floor and apartments above. 
 
It was purchased along with the Carlow Building in 2007 by a New York developer with plans to revamp the more than century old building into upscale residential units with storefronts on the first floor. The project was estimated at $2 million and a timeline for completion was set for early 2009.
 
Those plans were sidelined by 2008's global economic collapse and the project was only partially completed despite continued prodding by town officials, who had signed off on a million-dollar state grant to restore the Jones Block's facade. Instead, the developer declared bankruptcy and mortgageholder MountainOne Bank took possession of the two properties at a public auction in 2013.
 
Some work was done inside and a curved glass entrance installed in the alleyway between the block and what's now the Firehouse Cafe (which provided the refreshments for the reception.)
 
The 16,000-square foot building and the adjacent Carlow building were purchased three years later by real estate developers Peter West and Corey Bishop as Adams Park Street LLC.
 
LaBorde purchased the property in 2021, as FP QOZB I LLC, and described himself as the point man for a larger team including Jay Hayes of Wayland North, other backers and financiers, and "lots of subcontractors" who helped bring the building back to life. 
 
Hoosac Valley Superintendent Aaron Dean joined the ribbon cutting and Green ventured that his father and longtime selectman, the late Joseph R. Dean Jr., would be as pretty pleased as other board members in seeing the project finally come to fruition.  
 
Dean, as chair of the Selectmen back in 2007, had heralded the proposed renovation at the time as "the beginning of the transformation of Adams into a vibrant, thriving center."

Tags: apartments,   historic buildings,   open house,   

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Housing Secretary Makes Adams Housing Authority No. 40 on List of Visits

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff

Executive Director William Schrade invited Secretary Edward Augustus to the rededication of the Housing Authority's Community Room, providing a chance for the secretary to hear about the authority's successes and challenges. 
ADAMS, Mass. — The state's new secretary of housing got a bit of a rock-star welcome on Wednesday morning as Adams Housing Authority residents, board members and staff lined up to get their picture taken with him. 
 
Edward Augustus Jr. was invited to join the Adams Housing Authority in the rededication of its renovated community room, named for James P. McAndrews, the authority's first executive director. 
 
Executive Director William Schrade said he was surprised that the secretary had taken up the invitation but Augustus said he's on a mission — to visit every housing authority in the state. 
 
"The next logical question is how many housing authorities are there in Massachusetts? There's 242 of them so I get a lot of driving left to do," he laughed. "This is number 40. You're in the first tier I've been able to visit but to me, it's one way for me to understand what's actually going on."
 
The former state senator and Worcester city manager was appointed secretary of housing and livable communities — the first cabinet level housing chief in 30 years — by Gov. Maura Healey last year as part of her answer to the state's housing crisis. 
 
He's been leading the charge for the governor's $4 billion Affordable Homes Act that looks to invest $1.6 billion in repairing and modernizing the state's 43,000 public housing units that house some 70,000 low-income, disabled and senior residents, as well as families. 
 
Massachusetts has the most public housing units and is one of only a few states that support public housing. Numbers range from Boston's tens of thousands of units to Sutton's 40. Adams has 64 one-bedroom units in the Columbia Valley facility and 24 single and multiple-bedroom units scattered through the community.
 
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