Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Slammer sale: Closed prisons are a tough sell, states find

- By Chris Carola The Associated Press

Perched atop an Adirondack mountain, the 325-acre site for sale seems to have everything a developer could want: spectacula­r views, a man-made lake and close proximity to the tourist destinatio­n of Saratoga Springs. Oh, and former President Ulysses S. Grant lived out his final days in a home next door.

But the property on Mount McGregor was also a former New York state prison, and if history is any guide, it will be a tough sell.

States have found out the hard way that stunning views and good locations are not enough to overcome the baggage that comes with former prison sites. Massive, thick-walled cell blocks, dormitorie­s and infirmarie­s tend to be too expensive to tear down and too restrictiv­e to turn into viable enterprise­s.

Nationwide, at least 22 states have closed or announced plans to close 94 state prisons and juvenile facilities since 2011, and only a handful have been sold or repurposed, according to a December report by The Sentencing Project, a criminal justice reform advocacy group.

“This is new territory in a lot of respects,” said Nicole Porter, the report’s author. “This will require some creativity from developers for what to do with these spaces.”

Mount McGregor Correction­al Facility, on the market for a second time in two years, is among 13 prison and incarcerat­ion camps in New York that have closed since 2011. Only four have been sold.

Some of the more than 60 buildings sprawled across the mountain date a century or more to when a tuberculos­is sanitarium operated here. New York state bought the property in 1945 for a rest-and-recreation camp for servicemen returning from World War II. In 1960, the state turned it into a center for developmen­tally disabled people. Sixteen years later, it was repurposed yet again as a state prison.

“You look at the bones of the building and how it can be repurposed,” Peter Cornell, an executive with the Pike Co., a Rochester, New York-based developer, said during a recent tour.

New York state’s economic developmen­t agency didn’t list an asking price. Jack Kelley of the Albanybase­d Prime Companies real estate called it a “unique property” but said “if somebody pays more than $1 million for that property, they’re being taken to the cleaners.” William Moore, a Saratoga Springs real estate executive, predicted that whoever buys it will have “somewhat of a nightmare to deal with.”

Standing amid the peeling paint and unlit hallways of one of Mount McGregor’s empty dormitorie­s, Cornell said the state needs to offer at least four or five times the $8 million in redevelopm­ent incentives to make it work.

“I don’t see anybody taking the risk,” he said.

But a few states have seen successes. In Virginia, a former District of Columbia prison built in the 1920s has been sold to Fairfax County, which is overseeing redevelopm­ent that will include more than 270 single-family homes, townhouses and apartments. In Tennessee, the Brushy Mountain State Penitentia­ry, closed in 2009, is being turned into a whiskey distillery and tourist attraction.

Some among the handful of potential developers on the Mount McGregor tour had a similar vision.

William Browning, head of a television production company specializi­ng in reality-style shows, particular­ly liked the razor wiretopped chain-link fences and “The Walking Dead” vibe the place gives off. Among the potential uses he envisioned: conducting law enforcemen­t or military-related training or setting up a virtual reality theme park.

“We can theme out each building,” said Browning, CEO and executive producer for Weston, Florida-based Browning Production­s and Entertainm­ent. “You can be fighting Transforme­rs or be Harry Potter for the day, depending on the building that you go into.”

As for Mount McGregor’s other attraction — Grant Cottage, the two-story Victorian where Grant died in 1885 after finishing his memoirs — it will remain under the operation of the state’s historic preservati­on office, no matter if the property sells or not.

“I look at it as an asset,” Browning said. “It makes it more unique.”

 ?? CHRIS CAROLA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this photo, razor wire is coiled along a fence at the closed Mount McGregor Correction­al Facility in Wilton, N.Y. Perched atop an Adirondack mountain, the 325-acre site for sale seems to have everything a developer could want: spectacula­r views, a...
CHRIS CAROLA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this photo, razor wire is coiled along a fence at the closed Mount McGregor Correction­al Facility in Wilton, N.Y. Perched atop an Adirondack mountain, the 325-acre site for sale seems to have everything a developer could want: spectacula­r views, a...

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