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Tag: centralville

  • Distinguished U.S. Navy admiral, Lowell native to keynote Parker Lecture Series event

    Distinguished U.S. Navy admiral, Lowell native to keynote Parker Lecture Series event

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    LOWELL — The fall schedule of the Moses Greeley Parker Lecture Series begins Wednesday evening with Lowell native and retired U.S. Navy Adm. Michael Gilday serving as the keynote speaker and roundtable participant at UMass Lowell’s Comley-Lane Theatre at 6:30 p.m.

    Gilday served as the 32nd chief of naval operations from 2019 to 2023. He has also served as naval aide to the president, and is a recipient of the Defense Distinguished Service Medal, Navy Distinguished Service Medal, four Defense Superior Service Medals, three Legion of Merit awards, a Bronze Star, the Navy and Marine Corps Commendation Medal and the Combat Action Ribbon.

    “We are thrilled that Admiral Gilday has graciously accepted our invitation to be a part of the Parker Lecture Series,” said Parker Lectures Chair John Carson. “With his background as a native Lowellian and a distinguished career serving our country, he is exactly the type of speaker that Moses Greeley Parker had in mind when he started the trust in 1917. We are pleased to offer our audience the opportunity to interact with Admiral Gilday in a roundtable discussion.”

    Gilday will participate in a panel discussion with Carson, City Manager Tom Golden and Mayor Daniel Rourke. After the panel, Gilday will deliver his keynote address, during which he said he will talk about the U.S. military by drawing on his experience in the Navy.

    “I’ll talk about why I think it’s important for people to understand what we do, and why we do it,” Gilday said in a phone call Friday afternoon.

    Gilday grew up in Lowell’s Centralville neighborhood as the oldest of five children, and said the city provided all five siblings “a fantastic foundation for the rest of our lives.”

    “We all benefited from growing up in Lowell,” said Gilday.

    Gilday now lives in Alexandria, Virginia after retiring last year, but he said he comes back to visit the Mill City once or twice a year as his mother and two of his siblings live in the region.

    Following the keynote address, Gilday will engage in a Q&A session with the audience. Before the event on Wednesday, Gilday will also be bringing a younger sailor with him to the Boys & Girls Club of Greater Lowell and Lowell High School. He said it is “one thing for an old guy to talk about his experience in the Navy,” but he also wants the youth to be able to see and talk to someone about their experience much earlier in their naval career.

    “We are incredibly honored to welcome Admiral Gilday back to Lowell,” Golden said in a statement Friday. “His extraordinary service to our nation and his deep connection to our city make this a truly special event. It’s not every day we get to hear firsthand from a leader of such stature, and I know our community will benefit greatly from his insights.”

    Rourke said in a statement that Gilday “embodies the spirit of service that defines the city.”

    “He has made Lowell proud on the world stage, and we look forward to hosting him for this event,” said Rourke.

    UMass Lowell Chancellor Julie Chen said Gilday “has had a profound impact serving the U.S. Navy, our nation’s top leaders and the people of our country.”

    “I look forward to hearing his views on leadership and the lessons he learned during an impressive and distinguished career in uniform,” Chen said in a statement.

    Admission to the lecture is free for all, with a seating capacity of about 400.

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    Peter Currier

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  • Community Preservation Act funding cycle begins

    Community Preservation Act funding cycle begins

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    LOWELL — The owners of the Wannalancit Mills are asking for almost $97,000 in Community Preservation Act funding to restore the towering, red-brick smokestack off Suffolk Street.

    The 210-foot structure not only acts as a wayfinding beacon during the day, but also doubles as an industrial-sized green-and-white Christmas tree during holiday nights.

    In its application, the Farley White Management Company called the structure “One of Lowell’s ‘Industrial Redwoods.’”

    The project is one of 12 applications totaling $5 million submitted for eligibility consideration during September’s Community Preservation Committee meeting.

    Historically, about $2 million in funding is allocated every year to invest in community housing, preserving open and recreational spaces and historic preservation.

    Chair Adam Baacke reviewed the CPA funding with the nine-member board, which includes Department of Planning and Development Director/Assistant City Manager Yovani Baez-Rose, members of the city’s historic, planning and parks boards, and other appointees.

    “At this time of the year, we’re hearing the eligibility applications and the eligible applicants are then given the opportunity to submit full applications,” Baacke said.

    Past approved projects have included Rollie’s Farm as conservation land and agricultural education, restoring stained glass windows at City Hall and affordable housing projects like Acre Crossing.

    The Community Preservation Act was signed into law more than 20 years ago. In 2019, Lowell voters overwhelming approved putting a 1% surcharge on local property taxes to be used for community preservation projects.

    Exemptions were approved by the city for the first $100,000 of a residential property’s value, full commercial property value and low-income and low- or moderate-income senior homeowners. The city also receives a state match from the commonwealth’s Community Preservation Fund.

    Some of the applicants, like Suffolk Place and Mass Mills IV, are past recipients of CPA funding.

    “They can come to the well as many times as they want,” Baacke said.

    Surprisingly, there were no applications for the recreation or open space category, but several in historic preservation and four requesting funding for affordable housing projects.

    St. Anne’s Episcopal Church submitted a request for $800,000 to restore three historic buildings on its footprint that faces Merrimack Street bounded by the Merrimack Canal on one side and Kirk Street on the other.

    Manny Cavaleiro requested $59,000 to replace the windows in the historic building at 573-579 Lawrence St., home to Cavaleiro’s Steakhouse.

    Historic renovations comply with both the letter and spirt of the CPA law.

    “This funding is collected from all of the taxpayers from the community of Lowell,” Baacke said. “The general impression in this community and other communities in the state is that the historic preservation component of these funds should be used on things that are visible to the community that is paying for them.”

    He noted that the committee has not funded in the past projects that involved site landscape or interior renovations to buildings that didn’t also involve a community housing component.

    Coalition for a Better Acre submitted a request for $500,000 to construct nine affordable homeownership housing units, part of a $5 million project. Committee member Daniel Tenczar questioned that math that he said had each unit costing almost $600,000 per unit.

    “I would say that’s pretty on brand for subsidized housing development per unit cost,” Baez-Rose said. “Pretty standard numbers.”

    That cost metric highlighted the challenges for developers to construct subsidized/affordable-rate housing in the state. Most private housing building projects in the city are for market-rate housing.

    Mass Mills IV applied for an additional $1.5 million in CPA funds to restore the historic Boiler Building and Main Power Plant off Bridge Street and construct community housing.

    The buildings were the scene of a façade collapse last March that dumped tons of bricks on the newly opened Riverwalk along the Merrimack River. The pathway is still closed pending the securing of the buildings and restoration of the damaged walkway.

    The East End Club development, in the city’s Centralville neighborhood, requested $100,000 to construct two affordable housing units. And Suffolk Place applied for $300,000 toward the construction of 33 affordable housing units in the Acre.

    “If we’re fortunate enough, we’ll close in November of this year to commence construction,” said Steve Joncas, a real estate consultant who is working on the Suffolk Place project with the developer.

    The committee voted all 12 applications as eligible.

    “We use our fall meetings to hear presentations, to answer any questions and to ask questions of the applicants,” Baacke said.

    In January the committee will craft its recommendations before submitting the list to the City Council for final funding determination in time for the city’s budget discussion in May.

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    Melanie Gilbert

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  • Veterans Memorial Park opens in Belvidere

    Veterans Memorial Park opens in Belvidere

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    In July, civic leaders and veterans cut the ribbon on the Veterans Memorial Park on Douglas Road in Belvidere. The quarter-acre lot was an underutilized open space that was transformed into a public park to honor and remember Lowell veterans who gave the ultimate sacrifice for their country. The new park honors and recognizes all branches of the United States military.

    Originally Published:

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    Melanie Gilbert

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  • Groundbreaking ceremony marks start of Centralville housing project

    Groundbreaking ceremony marks start of Centralville housing project

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    LOWELL — A groundbreaking ceremony was held Aug. 13 to celebrate the start of a new affordable housing development in the Centralville neighborhood. The project, spearheaded by local developers Peter Marlowe and David Degan, is expected to bring much-needed housing to the area.

    The event was attended by city officials, including Mayor Dan Rourke and City Manager Tom Golden, as well as community members and project partners.

    Marlowe and Degan, both lifelong residents of Centralville, expressed their excitement about giving back to the community where they grew up. They emphasized the importance of providing affordable housing options for families in the area.

    The project involves transforming the property purchased from the East End Social Club into a mixed-use development. It will include new apartments and condominiums, as well as a renovated club space. The developers hope to create a vibrant community hub that will benefit residents for years to come.

    Funding for the project is provided through a partnership with Lowell Five Bank and the city of Lowell, who provided significant support with U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development financing supporting these affordable housing units. Marlowe thanked numerous individuals and organizations for their contributions to the project, including city officials, engineers, architects, and financial partners.

    Marlowe and Degan’s latest project marks another step in the ongoing revitalization of Centralville. With its completion, the neighborhood will be significantly transformed, offering a brighter future for new and current residents of the city of Lowell.

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  • Greater Lowell Tech students design signs for Lowell fire station

    Greater Lowell Tech students design signs for Lowell fire station

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    TYNGSBORO — Greater Lowell Technical High School students from the Computer Aided Drafting and Design, Carpentry and Painting and Design programs combined their talents to create two new signs for the Lowell Fire Department’s West Sixth Street Fire Station.

    Lowell Fire Lt. Shawn Sirois, who works out of the West Sixth Street Station where Engine 6 and Ladder 4 are stationed, reached out to the school to inquire about having students replace the signs for the station, which had rotted. Superintendent Jill Davis thought it would be a great community project for the students to engage in and students and instructors in the CADD, Carpentry and Painting and Design programs jumped at the opportunity.

    CADD students working under the direction of instructor Michael Stack helped design the initial logo and sign.

    Carpentry students, guided by instructor Michael Murphy, then used a large CNC router to cut AZEK PVC material into two 2-foot-by-8-foot signs that incorporated the design and department logo.

    Painting and Design students, working under Instructor Michael Donahue, then finished and painted the signs, experimenting with different types of paint and primer that worked best on the weather-proof PVC material.

    The finished signs were presented by the students and instructors in the Painting and Design program on Friday, April 5, to Assistant Fire Chief David Keene and firefighters from the West Sixth Street Station. The firefighters brought over and shared pizza with the students and instructors and thanked them for their work. The students who contributed to the project signed the back of the two signs and with their instructors posed for photos with the firefighters.

    Sirois said all the firefighters from the station were impressed by the high quality of the work.

    “What you guys did painting-wise was phenomenal,” Sirois said. “Hats off to you and hats off to everyone who did such a fantastic job.”

    Yamixeliz Suarez-Aguiar, a student in the Painting and Design shop, said the project was challenging because it involved work students had never done before.

    “We used new kinds of material and the fact that it was going out in public definitely added some pressure,” Suarez-Aguiar said. “But it also motivated us to really do our best at the same time.”

    Painting and Design student Isabella Viera said the new types of work that students had to do taught them new ways of painting and doing things.

    “It was so drastically different from what we usually do — it taught us to adjust and adapt to different scenarios,” Viera said.

    Painting and Design students Ashley Tineo and Jeaneudelis Torres said they enjoyed working on behalf of firefighters and knowing that the community will see their work.

    “When you’re in the shop everything is in a bubble and your work kinda stays within the school, so it was really nice working on a project that meant a lot to other individuals,” said Painting and Design student Beatriz Borba Brasil.

    “This project had such a positive impact on the students, fostering confidence in their abilities and pride in their workmanship. Having their efforts showcased in the community will undoubtedly be a source of pride for both the students and their families and friends. Being able to point to their contributions and say, ‘I was a part of that work,’ is truly a testament to their hard work and dedication,” said Davis.

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    Submitted article

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