Plans for environmental education complex in doubt
An ambitious plan to transform an abandoned paperclip factory at Dennings Point in Beacon into an environmental education complex is in doubt because Clarkson University has left the site.
A representative from the state parks department, which partnered with the university because it owns the land, confirmed last week that Clarkson, which operated the Beacon Institute of Rivers and Estuaries (BIRE) at the site, "elected to leave the facilities" in October.
Clarkson had operated its BIRE Water Ecology Center in a renovated, 19th-century brickworks building and started transforming the factory into the Beatrice G. Donofrio Environmental Education Complex. A representative from Clarkson said that the university "concluded the multi-year research we were doing at Beacon and decided to withdraw from the site." Clarkson said BIRE will continue to provide programming to K-12 schools.
The Water Ecology Center, which hosted lectures and classes, has sustainable features such as a green roof, natural ventilation and composting toilets. It received LEED Gold certification as an adaptive project.
State parks said it has not determined what it will do with the two buildings, although it does plan to update the HVAC in the Water Ecology Center. The agency is also responsible for the repaved walkways, new benches and informational kiosks installed last fall.
Clarkson announced its intention in May 2020 to transform the paperclip factory into the Donofrio complex. The exterior shell was completed in 2021, the same year that BIRE moved from its offices at 199 Main St. in Beacon into the Water Ecology Center.
In 2022, state parks announced it would make a $3.2 million investment in the site; a representative from Parks said on Friday (June 13) that because the project did not move forward, those funds were reallocated. However, state parks has since completed a $1.2 million project to improve the steel structure and add solar panels to the roof.
When the project was announced in 2020, Michael Walsh, then the president of BIRE, said the former factory was in good shape. "The majority of the building is salvageable," he said. "The concrete floor meets 100-year flood standards, and the structural seal is sound."