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CEDC delays formal action on townhouse restoration resolution to gather technical data

May 28, 2026 | Bridgewater, Plymouth County, Massachusetts


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CEDC delays formal action on townhouse restoration resolution to gather technical data
Members of Bridgewater’s new Community and Economic Development Council opened their first meeting by taking up a council referral on a resolution to advance restoration of the former town hall, known locally as the 'townhouse.'

Carlton Miller, speaking to the committee, updated members on grant and assessment work tied to the project. He said the town manager’s office received three quotes for an interior assessment and that a grant for an assessment was approved; the Community Preservation Committee (CPC) will be asked to provide an $8,000 match, yielding $16,000 for assessment work. "That grant was approved and the CPC will be requested to provide the match using our admin funds," Miller said.

Committee members emphasized the distinction between types of assessments. Several speakers noted the interior assessment under contract will not determine the building’s structural weight-bearing capacity and said a separate mechanical, electrical and structural evaluation would be required before any design or reuse decisions. Carlton Miller explained prior cultural reports include partial data, but more detailed structural testing is still needed.

The committee debated whether to refer the matter to an ad hoc committee or retain it within CEDC. Several members said ad hoc committees historically are council-centered and are appointed differently; others warned it is premature to form an appointment-heavy ad hoc until the town has contract and assessment results. Kevin (committee member) said CEDC should lead early planning — use CEDC to establish use, design and direction — and form a building or ad hoc committee only later when scope and contracts are clearer.

On the record a member moved to continue further action so members could rework the resolution's language and gather technical information; another seconded the motion. The motion was made and seconded during the meeting; the formal recorded vote tally does not appear in the transcript.

The committee agreed to bring back refined language and additional technical details for further consideration. Next steps identified on the record include completing the vendor selection for the interior assessment (award pending) and commissioning follow-up structural/MEP analysis once funding and scope are clarified.

Clarifying details: the transcript indicates an $8,000 required CPC match for an assessment grant (total assessment funds noted as $16,000) and that the interior assessment will not by itself determine load-bearing capacity. Members repeatedly framed the resolution as "aspirational" and agreed the council should revise language to reflect CEDC’s staged role (plan/use/design → potential ad hoc for implementation).

The committee did not adopt the resolution at the meeting and directed staff/members to return with revised text and technical information at a future session.

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