Boston Sunday Globe

Where alarms raised, new calling answered

Nonprofit highlights the work of BIPOC designers in remodel of Pittsfield firehouse into affordable units.

- By Regina Cole GLOBE CORRESPOND­ENT

Tyler Street Fire Station in Pittsfield was built in 1906, a twostory, two-bay, redbrick building with a pair of large arched garage doors for firetrucks to exit and enter.

North Adams-based real estate developer David Carver of CT Management Group points to the concrete floor inside.

“This was poured when the building was first constructe­d,” Carver said. “It is eight inches thick, heavy enough to bear the weight of fire engines, and now it is a great foundation for the building’s new life.”

The new life brought together a city persuaded not to tear down the building, a preservati­on-minded developer, and the efforts of The Kaleidosco­pe Project, a nonprofit collective devoted to showcasing the talent within the BIPOC (Black, Indigenous people, and people of color) design industry.

Now the fire station is home to four apartments: two onebedroom units measuring

1,000 square feet and two twobedroom 1,400-square-foot units. Because project members decorated the units for a show house, which about 500 people visited in late October, the apartments are equipped with designer-chosen, high-end elements, including top-of-the-line kitchens and baths and sophistica­ted lighting, wall coverings, paint colors, and window treatments.

“These are below-marketrate apartments,” said Amy Lynn Schwartzba­rd, project founder, “but they have

$70,000 kitchens.”

She explained her organizati­on’s history: “I was planning a show house in 2020 to raise money for the arts when

George Floyd was killed, and I realized that Black people are vastly underrepre­sented in the design industry. We founded The Kaleidosco­pe Project to amplify their voices.”

Tyler Street Fire Station was The Kaleidosco­pe Project’s second show house; last year, the organizati­on drafted 23 designers of color to reimagine the rooms of Lenox’s Cornell Inn. The fire station project brought together designers Denise Gordon, Tanya Lewis, and Marilyn LaVergne of Brooklyn, N.Y., and Montclair, N.J.; Everick Brown and Lisa Walker Brown of Yorktown Heights, N.Y.; David Santiago of Hackensack, N.J.; Rasheeda Gray of Cheltenham, Pa.; and Virginia Toledo of Franklin Lakes, N.J.

Pittsfield’s fire department left Tyler Street Fire Station in 1970 and, until 2008, it was used for storage. It stood abandoned and deteriorat­ing until Carver purchased it last year.

“The city was going to tear it down,” Carver said. “Just the demolition would have cost them between $250,000 and half a million dollars. I bought it from the city for $1,000 with the agreement that I would restore it and put in four apartments.

“Here in the Berkshires, we have a great shortage of rental housing,” he added. “These apartments will go on the city’s tax rolls. And it’s one more fine, old building we won’t lose.”

The local historical commission deemed the fire station historical­ly significan­t, making it eligible for Community Preservati­on Act funding.

Carver, an engineer by training, has turned several historic buildings in the area into housing, including downtown Pittsfield’s Dunham Building, Clock Tower Building, Holy Family Church, and Notre Dame School.

He was negotiatin­g with the city for the fire station when he met Schwartzba­rd, who was busy organizing the show house at the inn. They agreed that the fire station would be ideal for The Kaleidosco­pe Project’s next show house.

“We think of ourselves as a collective of Black women creatives,” said Gordon, of Austin Gray Design Group, who, with Lewis and LaVergne, designed one of the first-floor one-bedroom units.

She found inspiratio­n in the soaring ceiling heights and the natural light pouring in through enormous windows.

Now, fortunate new tenants will, too.

Regina Cole can be reached at coleregina@mac.com. Subscribe to the Globe’s free real estate newsletter on renting, buying, selling, and design at Boston.com/address-newsletter, and search the latest listings to rent or buy at Boston.com/realestate.

 ?? ?? Regarding the space seen here: “We use an outdoor daybed from Arhaus as the focal point in our great room main seating area,” Brown wrote. “To further enhance the feeling of the outdoors, we incorporat­e a black chalk wall in the background and colorful art scenes of the Berkshires captured by local artist Joanie Ciolfi to help bring the space to life.”
BELOW LEFT A kitchen Rasheeda Gray of Cheltenham, Pa., designed.
Regarding the space seen here: “We use an outdoor daybed from Arhaus as the focal point in our great room main seating area,” Brown wrote. “To further enhance the feeling of the outdoors, we incorporat­e a black chalk wall in the background and colorful art scenes of the Berkshires captured by local artist Joanie Ciolfi to help bring the space to life.” BELOW LEFT A kitchen Rasheeda Gray of Cheltenham, Pa., designed.
 ?? ?? BELOW “We began with the outdoors and cultural experience­s of the Berkshires. Activities like hiking, watersport­s, music, dance, theater and performanc­e arts inform our greatest inspiratio­n — “Live Free or Die,”’ Everick Brown of Yorktown Heights, N.Y., who designed the home with Lisa Brown, told the Globe via e-mail. “The story behind our space is to inspire people to think in a different way. When you see things through a different lens, you gain a different perspectiv­e, so we use outdoor elements in our space to encourage people to think differentl­y about being connected to nature, about being unafraid to be themselves, and about understand­ing that one’s value is their perspectiv­e. Difference is the only thing that makes us better.”
BELOW “We began with the outdoors and cultural experience­s of the Berkshires. Activities like hiking, watersport­s, music, dance, theater and performanc­e arts inform our greatest inspiratio­n — “Live Free or Die,”’ Everick Brown of Yorktown Heights, N.Y., who designed the home with Lisa Brown, told the Globe via e-mail. “The story behind our space is to inspire people to think in a different way. When you see things through a different lens, you gain a different perspectiv­e, so we use outdoor elements in our space to encourage people to think differentl­y about being connected to nature, about being unafraid to be themselves, and about understand­ing that one’s value is their perspectiv­e. Difference is the only thing that makes us better.”
 ?? PHOTOS BY TIM CREE/CREEPWALK MEDIA ?? ABOVE Designer Virginia Toledo of Franklin Lakes, N.J., was inspired by the brickwork of the original building: “Still standing strong after over 100 years, so many beautiful colors came through the brick that ranged from blush and coral to maroon and burgundy – topped with layers of peeling paint in other areas.” Those colors are reflected in the primary bedroom, Toledo said via e-mail. “The wall tile delivers a glossy sienna hue while the primary bedroom reads almost salmon in tone.”
PHOTOS BY TIM CREE/CREEPWALK MEDIA ABOVE Designer Virginia Toledo of Franklin Lakes, N.J., was inspired by the brickwork of the original building: “Still standing strong after over 100 years, so many beautiful colors came through the brick that ranged from blush and coral to maroon and burgundy – topped with layers of peeling paint in other areas.” Those colors are reflected in the primary bedroom, Toledo said via e-mail. “The wall tile delivers a glossy sienna hue while the primary bedroom reads almost salmon in tone.”

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