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Deed announces new owner of Springfield’s Paramount Theatre/Massasoit House hotel
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Deed announces new owner of Springfield’s Paramount Theatre/Massasoit House hotel

SPRINGFIELD — Winning bidders who bought the majestic but decayed Paramount TheaterThe /Massasoit House hotel block is a family-owned business that is restoring a small cinema in Connecticut and developing residential and retail in nearby Windsor.

Sachdev Real Estate Development in Suffield, 1676-1708 Main St., according to documents filed Wednesday with the Hampden County Register of Deeds Office. and 33 Gridiron St. He paid $750,000 for the Paramount and Massasoit property, a block-sized building at . Sachdev – headed by chairman Manmohan Sachdev – was the anonymous bidder in an online auction in late September.

“Our goal is to revitalize the Paramount and renovate the former Massasoit Hotel to support local small businesses, nonprofits and Springfield residents,” Sachdev Development said in a written statement. “Dr. Sachdev Real Estate Development Inc., run by Mohan Sachdev with the support of his development team and family, understands the impact of art on economic development. “We recognize and appreciate the tremendous investment and work done by developers, nonprofits, and private families in Springfield, and we are pleased to join this network committed to making the City of Firsts a shining star in New England once again.”

Veterinarian Mohan Sachdev could not be reached and his son, Neill Sachdev, declined to comment further.

The seller was the New England Agricultural Workers Council.

On Wednesday, Daniel M. Knapik, president and CEO of Partners for Community, the parent organization of the Farm Workers Council, said he thought any redevelopment would be a mix of apartments and businesses.

Indian Restaurant Punjab Tadka Knapik said he’s currently operating at Paramount and the former Luva restaurant doesn’t need much work.

The Paramount and the rest of the Massasoit House are in need of a lot of work due to falling plaster and constant water leaks. The theater has not hosted an event for nearly a decade.

Paramount theater and Massasoit complex in Springfield

The Paramount Theater and Massasoit Building complex in Springfield on Friday, August 23, 2024. Here is the interior of the Paramount Theatre. (Photo by Dave Roback)Dave Roback

In June, Sachdev broke ground on Residences Bowfield Green In Windsor. It’s a $20 million residential and retail development on two vacant sites and a former Ford dealership, according to the Hartford Business Journal.

Sachdev family renovated it from 2012 Plaza Theater and their attached storefront on Broad Street, also in Windsor.

The theater was built in 1929.

The 1,750-seat Paramount Theater opened in the same year as the stock market crash, also as a movie palace, just as talking pictures were coming onto the scene. Paramount has always hosted live stage shows, too, with Abbott and Costello, The Three Stooges and Jerry Seinfeld. It was once a rock venue with shows by the likes of Chuck Berry and eventually rapper 50 Cent.

The history of the Massasoit House hotel dates back even further, to 1843. Built to serve the railroad station across Main Street, the Massasoit House hosted dignitaries including four U.S. presidents, including Franklin Pierce, Andrew Johnson, Ulysses S. Grant and Theodore Roosevelt, as well as Jefferson. Davis of the Confederacy while he was U.S. secretary of war.

The city purchased the building in 2011 for $1.73 million and at one point made it the centerpiece of economic development plans. Penn National casino bid lost to MGM It later served as a boutique hotel developed by the owners of the Red Lion Inn. None of the offers materialized.

Starting last year, New England Farm Workers Council He was forced to sell his real estate portfolio, including Paramount, to pay off his debts. These debts included more than $1.8 million owed to the state. home heating grants was spent for other purposes.

7/1/2019 -Springfield- The New England Farm Workers Council held a groundbreaking ceremony to announce the start of the Massasoit/Paramount Theater revitalization project. From left to right, State Senator Eric Lesser, Springfield Mayor Domenic Sarno, State Representative Angelo Puppolo, State Senator Jim Welch, Cherrytree Group President Warren Kirshenbaum, State Representative Bud Williams, Heriberto Flores of the Farm Workers Council, Governor Charlie Baker, Congressman Richard Neal and State Representative Carlos Gonzalez. (Don Treeger / Republican)

The funding was secured under the direction of longtime council leader Heriberto Flores. Flores, who has political connections to the Latino community, declined to discuss the situation.

The council received a $2.5 million state grant for Paramount in 2018. In 2017, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development guaranteed a $3.6 million loan to the city to support the project. Both funding announcements brought state and local officials to Paramount.

Under the Red Lion plan, the money was spent on replacing roofs, carrying out interior work on the old hotel and improving electrical services.

Today, visitors to the hotel rooms and dining areas on the upper floors can see where walls were removed in preparation for this construction. Engineers were apparently uncovering structural elements to inform eventual renovation plans.

However, with the pandemic, these hotel plans fell through.

The council secured $1.8 million in debt this year by pledging its real estate, including Paramount, to the state.

The Farm Workers Council wasted $1,849,775 in Low Income Housing Energy Assistance Program funds while administering the program here. The money had to be paid back.

Under Knapik, a former Westfield mayor, Knapik said the council reduced its debt by submitting a recent financial record showing the council owed the state $575,000 as of Sept. 18.

The sale of Paramount does not directly help the LIHEAP debt, Knapik said. But it retired the $952,000 loan and removed $400,000 in annual maintenance costs, a $125,000 tax bill and other expenses from the city’s budget.

In December, Farm Works plans to auction off commercial buildings at 217-225 High St. in Holyoke, across from City Hall. The city still owns the Borinquen Apartments between Sheldon and Huntington streets and 32 Hampden St. There is a property right on an office building at . All are for sale.

The council still has four employees and, in a nod to the organization’s roots, manages a federal program that helps immigrant farmworkers. The city also holds the master lease for 1628-1640 Main St., a building it once owned but sold and still operates.

City Hall, 1628-1640 Main St. He rented the second store at street level, right next to Urban Gear. There are tenants on the third and fourth floors. Second floor available.