Wood Building ready for conversion to math and science center


FALLS VILLAGE — The question of what to do with the Clark B. Wood Building has been taken one step further with the hiring of an architect to come up with preliminary concept drawings by May.

The former agriculture education (ag-ed) building at the rear of the Housatonic Valley Regional High School campus has sat mostly idle since the new ag-ed facility was built six years ago. One section of the building, however, was converted by community members into an after-school art studio for students, known as the artgarage.

Last November, Region One Assistant Superintendent Tom Gaisford presented a two-and-a-half page paper to the regional Board of Education articulating his vision for the future of the building as a math and science center.

At a Board of Education meeting on April 2, Gaisford told board members he and a couple of Wood Building Subcommittee members, Francis Perotti and Perry Gardner, met March 22. They came up with the name "Work Center For Creative Technology Education" for the building.

"Although it it doesn’t roll off the tongue, the name depicts the promise that the Wood Building holds," Gaisford said.

Negotiations with the architect are ongoing, and Gaisford said the firm’s name will not be released until details have been finalized.

The next step will be to have the old heating system removed, clean out the building and sort out "the trash from the treasures stacked in corners and closets." Science teacher and robotics coach David Lindsay and ag-Ed department co-chair Mark Burdick haee also provided input. Members of the school’s Envirothon team have been researching alternative energy strategies that they will share with the architect. And Gaisford is researching "green energy funding sources."

"Our expectation is that we will have to proceed in phases as funding becomes available," Gaisford explained. "Unfortunately the initial phase will be rather costly."

That’s because it will likely include replacement of the heating system, electrical system improvements, more insulation, window repair or replacement, a firewall, exterior improvements and confronting what Gaisford called "safety code issues."

Named after the founder of the school’s agriculture education program, the Wood Building was supposed to be torn down when the new ag-ed complex was completed in 2001. But a group of teachers in the ag-ed department, with the help of ag-ed alumni and some local officials, including the Falls Village Board of Selectmen, fought hard to save the old building against the wishes of then-Superintendent John O’Brien.

They had hoped to use it to store trucks and large equipment used in the ag-ed department and to create a workspace for the school’s robotics team. The artgarage occupies one portion of the building, but the other portion sits largely dormant.

Last year Principal Gretchen Foster said she was inclined to turn the unused portion of the building into a place "that would attract cutting-edge science students who would use robotics as a starting point."

A Dec. 23, 2005, letter from several local officials implored Board of Education Chairman Judge Manning and the board "to take a proactive stance to create a vision for the renovation" of the building, which was constructed in 1961. The letter was signed by Salisbury Bank & Trust Chairman and CEO John Perotti, former Region One Board Chairman Robert Loucks, former HVRHS Principal Jack Mahoney, former Falls Village First Selectman Louis Timolat, former building committee chairman Perotti and State Rep. Roberta Willis (D-64).

They estimated the value of the building to be about $1 million and asked that it "not be squandered through neglect." They further urged the board to set aside funds for a professional study to determine the best use for the building.

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