Irondale schoolhouse relocation moves ahead

MILLERTON — Plans to move the old Irondale schoolhouse building into the center of the village are “starting to build momentum,� according to Ralph Fedele, who is on the steering committee for the project.

Three building contractors are working with the North East Historical Society, which is temporarily taking charge of the project until a not-for-profit organization called Friends of the Schoolhouse is created. That group will then oversee the project.

Contractors John Crawford, David Shapiro and Donald Najdek have visited the current site of the schoolhouse, north of the village on Route 22, to inspect the building and determine the best way to move it. The one-room schoolhouse was built in 1858 and is currently owned by Floyd Rosini. Cost estimates have come in, and the project now has what Fedele called “pretty good numbers� on the amount of funds needed to make the project a reality.

The grand total for everything is $145,000. That includes purchasing and moving the building, site work, including excavation and building a foundation, roof repairs and restorations like painting and installing shutters.

The project is broken up into two phases, Fedele explained. Phase one, which includes purchasing the building and the initial move, will cost $82,000. Funding for the second phase wouldn’t need to be raised immediately, and those costs could be postponed and done in smaller increments.

The building is proposed to be relocated to the center of the village, directly off the Harlem Valley Rail Trail entrance. Larry Wente, the project’s architect, has already designed a digitally-altered image that transposes the building to its proposed destination.

There are also areas where money could be saved. Fairpoint Communications, Central Hudson Gas & Electric and Cablevision would charge nearly $13,000 to move their wiring so the building could be installed. Fedele said some of those costs would be saved by taking off the peak of the schoolhouse and installing the building in two pieces.

Now with a numerical goal to work toward, “it’s a matter of funding and getting the word out,� Fedele said. More than $10,000 has been raised so far, which has been put into a specially designated account.

Last weekend the historical society kicked off the village’s Farmers Market with a booth advertising the move. Fedele said the campaign has started, and newspapers and radio stations will be contacted to raise public interest in the project.

Fedele also mentioned that he has forwarded information to Roger Akeley, commissioner for the Dutchess County Department of Planning and Development, as well as state Assemblyman Marc Molinaro and state Sen. Vincent Leibell.

“Once they know we’re serious and have gotten all this information together, maybe the money will start to come,� Fedele said.

Until Friends of the Schoolhouse is created, donations can be sent to the North East Historical Society, with a notation stating the money is for the Irondale Schoolhouse Fund. Donations can be sent to PO Box 727, Millerton, NY 12546.

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