Archive

Archive for 2022
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TFMoran Sponsors The Palace Theatre “Forever Emma” Golf Classic

TFMoran was a proud sponsor of the Palace Theatre “Forever Emma” Golf Classic to benefit the Forever Emma Scholarship Fund. The scholarship fund, created in memory of Bedford, NH resident Emma Bechert, is used to help other children become involved in the arts.

The tournament was held on a beautiful, yet chilly fall day at the Passaconaway Country Club in Litchfield, NH. The tournament included a shotgun start with a scramble format, a 19th hole reception, lunch, awards, and a raffle. TFMoran sponsored a hole along the course!

Thank you to the Palace Theatre for supporting children’s theatre and the arts, and putting on a great event!

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TFMoran Sponsors NeighborWorks Outstanding Neighbor Award Event

TFMoran sponsored the Neighborworks‘ 2022 David P. Goodwin Outstanding Neighbor Award reception, held at the Straw Mansion apartments in Manchester. This year’s award recipient was Sylvio Dupuis, given in gratitude and recognition of Sylvio’s commitment to Neighborwork’s mission of creating and sustaining quality affordable rental housing, fully educated future homeowners, and strong neighborhoods.

All proceeds from the event benefit Neighborworks Southern New Hampshire’s affordable housing initiative.

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Construction Begins on Marmon Aerospace Hooksett Facility

Marmon Aerospace & Defense recently held a groundbreaking ceremony for their new 81,600 SF facility located at the former site of Legends Golf in Hooksett. The new facility will house a state-of-the-art manufacturing operation and has an aggressive schedule for delivery of the building in the Fall of 2023.

Attendees enjoyed the amenities the site still has to offer, including a driving range, and a mini golf course that is staying at the site until the facility is further expanded.

NH Governor Chris Sununu attended, as well as representatives from Marmon Holdings, and TFMoran Principal Nick Golon.

TFMoran is providing civil/site engineering, structural engineering, surveying, landscape architecture, stormwater monitoring, construction administration, and permitting services for the project.

The Union Leader covered the event, see the full article here.

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TFMoran Sponsors Manchester Historic Association’s 30th Annual Historic Preservation Awards

The Manchester Historic Association held its 30th annual Historic Preservation Awards on September 8th at Manchester Community College.

The Historic Preservation Awards program recognizes and supports the efforts of individuals, businesses, and organizations who have made significant contributions to the preservation of buildings, neighborhoods, traditions and other historic resources in Queen City. The annual event raises money to support the Manchester Historic Association’s mission of collecting, preserving, and sharing the history of Manchester.

A recent TFMoran Structural project, The Factory on Willow was recognized among other projects in an assortment of award categories.

Congratulations to all the winners!

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TFMoran Participates in ASCE-NH Golf Outing

The ASCE-NH Annual Golf Tournament was held on Friday, August 12 at Beaver Meadow Golf Club. TFMoran Senior Project Manager and Principal Nick Golon, PE participated in a foursome along with clients from Eversource. Nick serves as President-elect of the organization and is also part of the golf committee. TFM summer intern Ben Hodsdon also attended the event, where he volunteered his time running the raffles! TFMoran is proud to be a platinum sponsor for this event.

Other participants in this event included various firms in the engineering community, raising money for the NH-ASCE Scholarship Fund to assist NH high school seniors and UNH students enrolled in ABET-accredited Civil Engineering Programs. The day included 18 holes of golf, continental breakfast, lunch, contests, and raffle prizes. All proceeds above event costs benefit the S. Russell Stearns and New Hampshire High School scholarship programs.

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TFMoran Sponsors Friends of Aine Kid’s Try-Athlon

TFMoran sponsored the 10th Annual Friends of Aine Kids Try-Athlon, held Sunday, August 14 at Bedford High School. Nearly 300 kids of all ages participated – running, swimming, and biking the three-sport event designed for all to be triumphant! TFMoran Principal Tom Lamb’s son Myles participated as well!

After the race, participants and their families were invited to join the “Family Festival” for activities including games, raffles, food, music, and dancing.

This year was the most successful Try-Athlon yet, raising over $60,000! The funds raised will support grieving families and children across the state, impacting hundreds of lives each day, helping them navigate their grief and find a little comfort and hope as they begin the hardest journey of their lives.

The event was covered by WMUR, check out the article here.

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Corey Colwell Panelist at NEREJ New Hampshire Seacoast Commercial RE Growth Conference

TFMoran principal Corey Colwell participated in New England Real Estate Journal‘s New Hampshire Seacoast Commercial Real Estate Growth Summit on August 17. Attendees enjoyed a breakfast buffet and networking before a panel discussion about the tremendous growth along the NH coastline. Corey sat on a panel to discuss new industrial, office, retail, and multifamily projects that have been skyrocketing within the past 5 years, with no signs of slowing down. TFMoran also sponsored the event.

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TFMoran Hosts 25th Annual Greater Manchester Chamber of Commerce Networking Summer BBQ

TFMoran proudly hosted the Greater Manchester Chamber’s “Network It Night” BBQ event for the 25th year on Thursday, August 18th. Over 120 chamber members, guests, TFMoran staff, and their families enjoyed the evening at the Bedford office. The rain held off, and the weather was a comfortable 80 degrees, perfect for this year’s tropical theme! Attendees were encouraged to wear their best vacation attire, grab something to eat, and connect with fellow Chamber Members. Guests could view some of TFMoran’s recent engineering projects that were on display or even challenge each other to a cornhole match!

Tidewater Catering of Manchester, NH did a great job grilling steak & chicken tips, while The Inside Scoop treated us to Coffee Oreo and Purple Cow ice cream. Bob Duval, TFMoran’s President, gave a brief talk thanking the staff for coordinating the event, which he looks forward to year after year! Raffle prizes were given away, including concert tickets and cool merch!

Thank you to the Greater Manchester Chamber board and members for joining us for such a fun event. And, a big thank you to all the TFM staff who helped to make this another successful event!

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TFMoran Sponsors Bedford Bulldogs Youth Cheer and Football

TFMoran is rooting on the Bedford Bulldogs Youth cheer and football programs as a sponsor for the 2022 season! The Bedford Youth Football Association is a football and cheerleading organization for boys and girls between the ages of 5 and 15, promoting a balance of sportsmanship, team spirit, and competition for the youth of our community.

The Adaptive Cheer program offers clinics and day camps all summer, gearing up toward the start of the competition season in October.

The Football program offers flag football for ages 5 through 7, and tackle football for ages 8 through 12.

TFMoran is proud to support our local communities where we work and live.

Go Bulldogs!

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The Factory on Willow Featured in NHBR’s July “From the Ground Up”

The July issue of New Hampshire Business Review features The Factory on Willow in a special section “From the Ground Up”. TFMoran is proud to be a part of the project team with Eckman Construction and Market Square Architects. We invite you to check out the article by clicking this link or by reading the text below.

Congratulations to the Factory on Willow and the whole project team!


FROM THE GROUND UP: The Factory on Willow: ‘If you restore it, they will come’


Remember the movie, “Field of Dreams” with Kevin Costner and James Earl Jones? An Iowa farmer is summoned by voices from the Great Beyond to build a baseball stadium in his corn field. One of the most iconic lines that is now part of our popular culture is “If you build it, they will come.”

In the case of The Factory on Willow, the saying would be, “If you restore it, they will come” and inspire other investors to do the same with other properties in Manchester’s South End.

When Elizabeth “Liz” Hitchcock decided to purchase the former Cohas Shoe Factory on 252 Willow St. in 2019, she formulated a concept they knew would yield great dividends. Her plan was to restore the 90,000-square-foot factory into a mixed-use development where artists and gig professionals could live, work and enjoy everything that downtown Manchester has to offer while preserving the rich history of the mill that was constructed in 1904.

Preston Hunter, vice president of Eckman Construction Co. in Bedford and the project’s general contractor, explained the end result is a four-story complex that includes 61 studio apartments, commercial space, a food truck court and 16 Airbnb units to accommodate nurses and visiting high-tech workers. The Artist in Residence program also enables artists of all types to live and complete special projects at The Factory on Willow.

Hunter said the space also includes commercial uses that may eventually include a craft distillery, beer garden and office space. Loon Chocolate and 603 Charcuterie have already established thriving retail businesses there, and a large event space is available for rental.

“There are a lot of opportunities for different uses,” Hunter said.

In addition to the food truck patio, Hunter said an amphitheater is planned where live performances will be staged.

“We are in the process of creating a distillery on-site,” said Hunter, adding that it would consist of a free-standing building that would include a tasting room.

“We did create, in addition to the food truck patio, an area for residents who would like to have raised beds and grow some vegetable gardens and other plantings.”

Besides the amphitheater and additional landscaping that will take place throughout The Factory on Willow’s property, Hitchcock recently said she is banking on two transportation projects to spur growth in the South End and fuel greater success for The Factory on Willow. The first includes a $25 million federal RAISE grant that will be used to create a new roadway with a bridge and pedestrian bike access near the intersection of South Willow St. and Queen City Ave. along with a pedestrian bridge over Granite Street. The second is the completion of the South Manchester Rail Trail that runs directly behind The Factory on Willow. The rail trail is part of a much larger network that will eventually run from Goffstown to the Seacoast. When completed, both projects will offer improved access to the South End.

Hunter said that Hitchcock’s vision was to create a living space where art would be promoted and celebrated as well as integrated into the surrounding community.

Hitchcock also selected items to be featured in the building to display its rich history, including the original wood and glass doors, cast iron boiler arch doors and a wooden beam that has been repurposed into a bench in the lobby.

Adam Wagner, owner of Market Square Architects in Portsmouth, played an instrumental role to help Hitchcock transform her vision into a dynamic design that incorporates the mill’s rustic red brick walls and timber frames in the building’s open-air studio apartments. Orbit Group with visiting designers created the furnished Airbnb units so they will appeal to the targeted demographic of artists and gig economy workers.

“What’s unique about this project is residents are looking for more than just cookie-cutter apartments. They want to be part of a community,” Hunter said. “It is set up to be a real live-work studio experience.”

By combining a millennial-style, live-work experience and the history of the former McElwain Shoe Factory, Hunter believes that Hitchcock succeeded with all of her goals.

Hunter’s family also has a direct link to the mill’s storied past.

“My mother-in-law worked in the shoe factory when she was a teenager,” he said.

The two-year project that began in 2019 was completed in March 2021 when the first residents moved into the building, Hunter said.

All of this was happening during the Covid-19 pandemic. “We were able to keep the job site running throughout the pandemic,” Hunter explained.

Hunter pointed out the process to transform the once abandoned factory into its current use was a challenging one. “It is important to remember that this building was a collection of additions that had been tacked on to the original mill building over the decades as the use had changed and it presented a lot of complications and challenges from a design standpoint,” he said.

They partnered with Market Square Architects to deal with those challenges. TFMoran, the structural engineer out of Bedford, played a key role in helping them evaluate the structure of the building and the additions, Hunter said.

“We determined as a team that some of the newer additions were functionally obsolete. We ended up demolishing some portions of the building that were not part of the original mill building that was bult in 1904,” Hunter said.

“We brought the building back to its original form. That allowed us to keep what was best about the building and remove the portions that didn’t add any value. We also exposed portions of the building that hadn’t seen the light of day for a very long time,” Hunter explained.
He noted the project included a lot of masonry restoration. He said there is a tower that was part of the original mill complex that was restored. There was also a great deal of masonry undertaken on the outside and inside of the building.

He said the building also had a timber frame that was showing its age. “The structural engineer evaluated every beam and every column after we had opened and exposed everything to identify the ones that needed to be re-supported.”
Like many mill restoration projects, this one also required its share of environmental remediation.

“The building also did contain some asbestos and lead paint, which had been sort of buried under multiple layers of flooring. We had to remove all of the hazardous materials and everything was disposed of to create a clean environment, so we could start essentially with a clean slate,” Hunter said.

Hunter said the site was also home to a former underground oil storage tank that had failed 50 years ago. The tank had leaked its heating oil, and it was a managed site by the state Department of Environmental Protection. In most cases, developers might leave it alone and pave over it. But Hitchcock decided it was best to remove the contaminated soil and clean up the site with fresh soil. The building and site were then completely cleaned out and restored to their original state.

“The team really put the time and the effort in to understand the unique quirks of the building as much as possible before we started construction. The building really has great bones, and the design goal was to really showcase the existing qualities as much as possible,” Hunter said.

Some of the other improvements included two new stairwells to meet new egress requirements for the apartments on both ends of the building floor to floor. The building was also designed to provide fresh air to every apartment and common space in the building. New windows were installed throughout the building with beautiful black frames that are historically accurate and provide great natural light throughout.

“It is also an investment in the southern part of the city. There has been a lot of redevelopment in the Millyard, the North End and downtown. This project is the first to recognize there is great opportunity in the South End of Manchester. It has created a bit of a destination onto itself by having all those amenities. It will also create an opportunity for development in this part of the city as the need for housing continues to grow,” Hunter said.

The team’s collective efforts to create a new crown jewel in Manchester has also gained recognition from Plan NH, which awarded the project a merit award in June.