ZBA approves affordable rental housing project in Pelham amherstbulletin.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from amherstbulletin.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Jen Salinetti is the co-owner of Woven Roots Farm in Tyringham. Lise Metzger Photography
Do you know where your asparagus comes from? What kind of soil does it call home? How about the farmer who grows it?
Guidoâs Fresh Marketplace knows. Guido s is a partner of sustainable farms all across the region, which keeps your produce local, organic, and moving swiftly from the field to your kitchen.
Brothers Chris and Matt Masiero are the owners of Guidoâs Fresh Marketplace stores, in their Pittsfield store. Eagle File Photo
Tyringhamâs Woven Roots Farm, Left Field Farm in Middlefield, and Indian Line Farm in South Egremont are three of those small-scale ag operations that will soon be delivering springâs bounty to a Guidoâs near you.
Pelham affordable housing project on track with permitting
The former fly rod factory in Pelham would be demolished to make way for an apartment building. Another building with six apartments would be built nearby. SUBMITTED PHOTO
GOOGLE EARTH
PELHAM Pelham’s first affordable housing project, featuring almost three dozen one, two- and three-bedroom apartments on the site of a former fly rod factory, remains on track to be developed in the next two years.
Known as Amethyst Brook Apartments, the $12 million project proposed by Home City Development Inc. of Springfield has begun the process of Conservation Commission review with the filing of a notice of intent under the Wetlands Protection Act.
Pelham affordable housing project on track with permitting
The former fly rod factory in Pelham would be demolished to make way for an apartment building. Another building with six apartments would be built nearby. SUBMITTED PHOTO
GOOGLE EARTH
Published: 2/2/2021 7:04:31 PM
PELHAM Pelham’s first affordable housing project, featuring almost three dozen one, two- and three-bedroom apartments on the site of a former fly rod factory, remains on track to be developed in the next two years.
Known as Amethyst Brook Apartments, the $12 million project proposed by Home City Development Inc. of Springfield has begun the process of Conservation Commission review with the filing of a notice of intent under the Wetlands Protection Act.