Which is more of value?

Historic Armory to be Demolished in the Face of Economic Vitality


By Lucia Stewart, 2-26-08

 
 

Downtowns are fragile areas in our Western landscape as the increase of big box stores sprout up and retailers sprawl outward from our cities’ core. Local commissions and groups seek out economic infusion, and sometimes as the cost of historic preservation.

In a hard decision on Monday night, the Bozeman City Commission decided to give the green light for the destruction and demolition of the 1941 Bozeman Armory, an art-deco style building listed on the National Register of Historic Places located in Downtown Bozeman.

The replacement will be a new 4-story, brick and glass façade building highlighted to have environmental qualities including an earth-covered roof laden with trees, water features and a glass lounge.

“We need to encourage investment downtown,” said Commissioner Jeff Krauss. “We need to look at what downtown needs now and in the future. It’s not just about building east and west, but also north and south.”

Bozeman has acquired over 1 million square feet of retail space on North 19th last year, an area not in the vicinity of downtown and is having economic impacts on downtown businesses.

There was 1 letter of support for the demolition, 50 signatures on a petition, and 43 letters of opposition, including letters from the Montana Preservation Alliance, the National Trust for Historic Preservation, the Montana State Historic Preservation Office and the Bozeman Historic Preservation Advisory Board.

In order to demolition a National Registered Historic Building, which shows architectural, social, cultural or historical importance, the building must pose a threat to public health, be beyond repair and/or have no viable useful life remaining.

Despite the 18-inch concrete shell, the developers’ architects, Bechtle-Slade, didn’t see the building fit for redevelopment, citing lead paint, asbestos, failing roof, outdated mechanical and electrical structure, and the raised 1st floor four-feet from the pedestrian sidewalk as non-conducive for retail space. The Commission, the Bozeman community and the National Historic Preservations Boards didn’t quite equate these facts to “no viable useful life remaining.”

The Bozeman City Planning Staff recommended a two-year stay on the Armory’s demolition to explore alternatives for redevelopment.

But then the conversation turned to the economic viability of Bozeman’s downtown.

The building has sat vacant for almost five years, except for one brief stint but renters were evicted when the winter bills and rent income didn’t pencil out. Before this, the State of Montana had abandoned the surplus building.

Then in September of 2003, in the wake of Dick Clotfelter’s grandiose plans for building the Arts and City Center in the heart of downtown Bozeman, the City assisted in acquiring the building from the state in order to be sold to a private developer.

With the community overwhelmed with excitement on the Arts and City Center project, many wrote-off the Armory’s destruction as a worthy trade in the new development. Due to this and not wanting to threaten the value of the bids, the city didn’t deed the inability to demolish the building. Clotfelter’s plans fell through and the building was sold.

Since that time, the inefficient occupancy issues have unfortunately left this historic building to graffiti and vandals, and created a vacant block in downtown Bozeman.

When the developers’ representative stated that the building would most likely be sold if approval wasn’t received that night— since they’ve been working on the site for over two years — the Commission’s discussion took the path of downtown’s economic viability as a whole, not just localized on one building.

Commissioner Eric Bryson did make the point that the applicant did only the bare minimum to prove the economic inability of the building, as no financial numbers were shown to prove redevelopment was not an option.

The developers, Michael Libster and Thomas Nygard, have planned the demolition as soon as possible to being construction on “The Willson,” named after the architect of the historic Armory building.



Like this story? Get more! Sign up for our free newsletters.

NEW WEST FEATURES                                                                 More>>

Advertisement

Comments

By dan, 2-28-08
By Tripp, 2-28-08
By jeff, 2-29-08
By Cameron, 4-05-08

Comment policy:

NewWest.Net encourages robust and lively, but civil participation from our readers. By posting here, you agree to the NewWest.Net terms of service. You agree to keep your comments on topic, respectful and free of gratuitous profanity. Contributions that engage in personal attacks, racism, sexism, bigotry, hatred or are otherwise patently offensive will be subject to removal.

Other than using a filter that scans for comment spam, we do not moderate contributions before they are posted and we do not review every thread, so we ask that you help us in keeping the discussions civil and appropriate. Please email info@newwest.net to notify us of comments that may violate these guidelines. Thanks for your help and cooperation. Click here for some tips on how to best interact on NewWest.Net.

Your Comment

Name

Email

Remember my name and email address.

Notify me of follow-up comments.

Advertisement