16 Comments Posted by Simon
- Location: Western Center (view comments)
- Gallery: Following the Tracks
- Location: Gaebler Children's Center (view comments)
- Gallery: Control
Now I run a civil and environmental engineering company that has worked on redeveloping some large, old abandoned properties. I can tell you from firsthand experience that Bennett is done. Whatever it once was, it cannot be put back together. If the developer is willing to pay $4M for the facility as a tear-down, then the cost of restoring Halcyon Hall alone must be several times that. Until you have done the work of putting one of these sites into useable condition, you really can’t understand the economics of it. This building CAN’T be restored. If it were right back in the condition it was in the seventies, it would still need to be torn apart and refurbished to be useable now. The plumbing, heating, and asbestos issues in the photos I have seen online alone would crush the project.
My experience has been that lots of casual onlookers want these types of “grand old buildings” restored because they make nice scenery as they drive past and local folks get very sentimental for the way it was back when, but very few of these people will ever put a dime to the massive cost of rebuilding it. If you think that Halcyon Hall would work as a hotel, then you haven’t done the math. If the place charged more than high end Manhattan hotels and was full every night, it would take decades to make even a meager ROI on rebuilding it. “Adopt a room?” That idea will work if people will pay a couple of hundred K per room and the rooms would have to be demolished and rebuilt anyway.
From what I have read (and I was sad to hear that the Round Table had folded) there are only two likely paths for Bennett. If the town is lucky, a developer will turn the property into something viable that retains some features of its past architecture. If you can’t find somebody to do that, or if well-meaning, but overly sentimental folks drive the developers off, then the ruin will end up as municipal property (town or county) and will crumble slowly for decades. I have seen way too many properties like this where passionate folks with good intentions run off the developers, celebrate their righteous victory, and then gripe for years after about why nobody will do anything with the ruin.
It is really sad to lose such a distinctive property, but Bennett failed as a college and nobody came up with a viable use for it over the last 30 years. If there was one, it surely would have surfaced during one of the real estate booms during those years.
And take it easy on the cranky caretaker. I knew him in high school and he was a nice (if somewhat intense) guy.
- Location: Bennett School for Girls (view comments)
- Gallery: Close Calls
- Location: Essex County Isolation Hospital (view comments)
- Gallery: Quick Run
and also think about how much money would id be worth sold for recycling
- Location: Clairvaux Tuberculosis Hospital (view comments)
- Gallery: Hello Again
- Location: Hewitt State Hospital and Prison (view comments)
- Gallery: Prison and Medical Building
- Location: Foxboro State Hospital (view comments)
- Gallery: Transitions
- Location: Staten Island Boat Graveyard (view comments)
- Gallery: Wrecks
- Location: Kings Park Psychiatric Center (view comments)
- Gallery: Buildings 136 & 137 (Medical-Surgical)
- Location: Kings Park Psychiatric Center (view comments)
- Gallery: Buildings 136 & 137 (Medical-Surgical)
- Location: Plymouth County Hospital (view comments)
- Gallery: Feverish
- Location: Pennhurst State School (view comments)
- Gallery: The Sadness
- Location: Pennhurst State School (view comments)
- Gallery: The Sadness
- Location: Pennhurst State School (view comments)
- Gallery: The Sadness
Kill-joys.
My bet is on an eventual - very spectacular - fire.
I did not say "accidental."