Showing posts with label Buy-a-Brick. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Buy-a-Brick. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

The Winter Season at the Freight Shed is a Wrap!


Join us this Saturday, April 27th, as we celebrate a great winter season at the Freight Shed. 


Thanks to the Bath Farmers Market for their faith in this project and to all the customers new and old who made this place such a vibrant fun place to be on Saturday mornings.

Thanks to all the community partners and artists who shared their work with us in the community room and thank you to all the musicians who serenaded us!

Thanks to all the volunteers who spruced up the place, added layers of insulation in various forms, thanks to the board members who work so hard to make this venture viable and something that can be sustained and an extra special thank you to Jay Coffey who saw the sunrise every Saturday for six months to get the space heated up and ready for the day and would be at the Freight Shed at a moments notice to help out!

This weekend we wrap up the season with an exhibit of Keith Spiro's photographs of the Goranson Farm. We are so grateful to the farmers and food producers for all their hard hard work that fuels this community. Keith's photographs connect us with the beauty of the place and the people.



Thanks to all of you who have become members, bought bricks and Kickstarted just a year ago! There will be lots happening this summer and many ways to participate! Please stay posted.

Wiebke

Friday, February 22, 2013

Bath Shed Fundraising Hits the Bricks



Alex Lear, The Forecaster
Wednesday, February 20, 2013 at 11:10 am

BATH — Fundraising bricks to pay for improvements to a 19th century freight shed are available for order.

The City Council gave unanimous consent Jan. 2 to a proposal from the Bath Freight Shed Alliance to include the bricks in a sidewalk to be constructed this year along Commercial Street.

The bricks cost $150 each. An order form is available at bathfreightshed.blogspot.com, from bathfreightshed@gmail.com, or at the Bath Winter Farmers Market, which runs Saturdays through April at the shed from 9 a.m.-noon. Forms are also available at the real estate office of Sharon Drake, 136 Front Street.

The group, which plans to donate the bricks to the city, is selling engraved space on the bricks to charter members as part of its membership drive. Each brick will have two engraved lines, with space for 20 characters and spaces on each line.

The shed improvements, which could cost between $18,000 and $23,000, include repairs to the building's Commercial Street-side sill and its foundation wall. The work would run concurrently with excavation of the Commercial Street side of the shed for construction of the sidewalk.

Restoration of the shed's exterior is planned as a later project.

The shed is also the construction site of the Virginia, a replica of a historic pinnace built at the Popham colony in 1607-1608.

The sidewalk work will be funded primarily through federal funds distributed by the Maine Department of Transportation, and should go out to bid in late spring and be constructed this summer, City Planner Andrew Deci said last month.

Alex Lear can be reached at 781-3661 ext. 113 or alear@theforecaster.net. Follow him on Twitter: @learics.