
Reading Pagoda getting full makeover
Reading's Pagoda is getting a $4.7 million makeover inside and out.
Work began last week at the landmark building on Mount Penn.
The project is funded by $3 million in American Rescue Plan Act, or ARPA, funds and about $1,7million in city investment, said David Anspach, city capital project manager.
'Basically, all surfaces are going to be attended to in one way or another,' Anspach said, 'whether it is paint, whether it is stain, whether it is remediating concrete, whether there is a section of the corner of the building that we're entirely rebuilding, there are remediations going on at all levels.'
The renovation plan aims for 60% to 75% waste reduction, he said, noting materials will be salvaged, reused or recycled to the extent possible.
The area around the Pagoda will be off limits to the public for safety during construction, officials noted, and a fence has been placed around the building.
David Anspach, city capital project manager, points out the recently installed security cameras at the Pagoda. (BILL UHRICH/READING EAGLE)
Anspach said the exterior upgrades include repointing the masonry, repainting wooden surfaces and replacing the existing incandescent lighting with a full light-emitting diode, or LED, package.
'We are anticipating and hoping that we will be completed with that for Dec, 25 for Santa this year,' Anspach said, referring to the longstanding tradition of blinking the Pagoda lights on Christmas Eve to signal Santa Claus.
The deteriorated lights were deemed unsafe for flashing, so a city firetruck filled in the last three years.
LED lighting, which uses significantly less energy and typically has a long lifespan, should result in substantial savings for the city on electric bills and in replacement costs.
The most significant structural repair, Anspach said, involves the northeast corner of the balcony where a portion of the concrete deteriorated, exposing a metal beam to corrosion.
David Anspach, city capital project manager, inspects weather damage to concrete areas of the Pagoda. (BILL UHRICH/READING EAGLE)
The beam and concrete must be replaced, he said, noting the repair is a major undertaking that will require temporary support for that corner of the building.
Interior rehabilitation includes upgrades to the heating and cooling system; fire safety measures, including installing new sprinkler heads; repairing and replacing plumbing fixtures as needed; and upgrading the lower-level restrooms to be ADA compliant.
A kitchenette that can be used for catered events will be installed on the first floor and will include hand-washing stations and food preparation areas.
Anspach said the project aims to modernize the facility for improved functionality and public use while preserving the historical architecture of the structure.
The history
The Pagoda was built in 1907 for William Abbott Witman, an entrepreneur and one-time mayoral candidate who owned a quarry on the site.
Witman planned the building as a resort but failed to obtain a liquor license, and the bank foreclosed on the property.
Reading department store owner Jonathan Mould and his wife, Julia Bell Mould, bought the property, which included 10 acres, and presented it to the city in 1911.
The Pagoda has undergone extensive repairs and upgrades in its 118 years, including the 1949 replacement of the original wooden balconies, columns, posts and railings with reinforced concrete and limestone.
Other major repairs were made in the 1970s under Mayor Victor Yarnell and the 1990s under Mayor Warren Haggerty.
Anspach said the goal is to complete the current project by the end of the year. A reopening date has not been set.
The city and Foundation for the Reading Pagoda, which oversees the property in partnership with the city, are in discussions about future operations, Anspach said.
Ideas include the possibility of a public-private partnership, he noted.
'I'm really proud to be part of a project that brings this local community icon back to where the public will be able to utilize it,' Anspach said.
English Bradley, chief of staff to Mayor Eddie Moran, and David Anspach, city capital project manager, stand outside the Pagoda as renovations begin. (BILL UHRICH/READING EAGLE)

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
34 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Sen. Mike Lee, House conservatives demand changes to Trump's tax bill
WASHINGTON — Fiscal conservatives are demanding a number of changes to the Republican-led reconciliation package, including the elimination of some provisions that were key to getting the bill through Republicans' slim majority in the House last month. The House Freedom Caucus began circulating a memo Monday evening outlining dozens of changes to the tax package, which passed the House in a narrow 215-214 vote in late May. The bill is now being considered by the Senate, but House conservatives have made it clear they are not satisfied with the final product — and are demanding their colleagues in the upper chamber make edits. 'Through the negotiations in the House and the hard work of the President and the White House, we took significant steps to improve the reconciliation package known as 'One Big Beautiful Bill,'' the memo reads, according to a copy obtained by the Deseret News. 'However, there remain substantial concerns and a great deal of misinformation circulating about the bill. … Below, please find specific recommendations for the Senate to deliver a product we can pass in the House.' At the top of the list — underneath a headline that reads: 'The Senate Needs to Improve the House OBBB' — the fiscal conservatives are demanding Senate Republicans find deeper spending cuts than those included in the current resolution. The tax reconciliation package currently allows for up to $3.7 trillion in tax cuts over the next decade, according to projections from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. However, the bill includes only $1.3 trillion in spending cuts to offset those costs, raising concerns among Republicans that the package will raise the national debt. While GOP leaders, including Utah Rep. Blake Moore, argue the report doesn't factor in the economic growth that will likely come from the tax cuts tucked into the package, members of the Freedom Caucus say 'savings are backloaded and are subject to the whims of a future Congress, heavily affected by future policy changes and tax extensions, and unlikely to fully occur.' Notably, the conservatives are also demanding the Senate scale back an agreed-upon increase to federal deductions for state and local taxes paid, also known as SALT. Republican leaders offered to increase the current deduction cap to $40,000 — up from the current $10,000 limit — for individuals who make $500,000 or less a year. That cap would then increase by 1% every year over the next decade and remain permanent after that period. The policy mostly affects high-tax states, but the changes were made to appease a group of blue-state Republicans who repeatedly threatened final passage if a higher deduction was not included. Members of the House Freedom Caucus have pushed to undo that deal, arguing it 'disproportionately benefits high-income households in high tax (Democrat-run) states,' according to the memo. That's unlikely to go over well with the faction of New York Republicans who spent months negotiating a SALT increase. Rep. Mike Lawler, R-N.Y., who helped lead that charge, has warned for weeks that if the Senate changes the numbers, he and his fellow New York Republicans would reject the bill. 'Cool. Good luck with that,' Lawler said in a post on X shortly after the memo was released. The memo also urges Senate Republicans to 'hold the line' on certain provisions included in the House version, including language that would fully repeal green energy credits passed by the Biden administration through the Inflation Reduction Act. 'Hold the line on the House OBBB reforms to significantly strengthen the rollback of IRA subsidies for wind and solar to end during President Trump's term — otherwise they will inevitability be renewed as in the past,' the memo states, 'and, by that point, the grid will become generally unreliable with no quick fixes to inevitable widespread unaffordability and power outages.' That demand comes in response to a push by some Republicans in the Senate — including Utah Sen. John Curtis — who want to preserve some of the clean energy tax incentives in the IRA, arguing they are crucial for Trump's agenda to remain energy independent. Conservatives are similarly pushing for deeper cuts to Medicaid benefits, outlining specific changes that would 'protect the most vulnerable' while addressing 'money laundering, fraud, and abuse.' Suggested language would be to implement specific definitions to crack down on Medicaid coverage for undocumented immigrants as well as stricter work requirements for Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP. The demands come as Senate Republicans have hinted at major changes to the House-passed reconciliation bill — with some suggesting to ease the deep spending cuts already passed while others have argued the package does not go far enough. Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, has been at the forefront of demanding those changes, telling the Deseret News that 'everyone understands there are going to be some modifications made to the House bill.' 'Nobody believes that the House bill, unadorned, unmodified, is going to pass,' he said. For example, Lee supports maintaining the full repeal of the IRA green energy credits as well as cracking down on illegal immigrants relying on Medicaid. Meanwhile, the president is telling the Senate to 'make the changes they want' — sending mixed messages as Republicans consider alterations to the budget framework advancing policies on the border, energy, national defense and tax reform. Some of the hard-to-convince lawmakers hope their stubbornness will ward off any of their Senate colleagues from making drastic changes, noting the drawn-out process in the House should deter them from doing so. 'I think after seeing how painful of a process this is and how difficult it is to get anything through this side, I think that will send a strong message in the Senate that you can't really change it,' Rep. Eric Burlison, R-Mo., a member of the Freedom Caucus, told the Deseret News last month. Contributing: Brigham Tomco
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Big Y plans changes to its Tower Square store
SPRINGFIELD — Big Y will close its Big Y Express Fresh Market location in Springfield's Tower Square for two weeks starting July 4, reconfiguring the space and swapping out product categories. In an emailed response to questions from The Republican, Big Y spokeswoman Aimee Diliberto said customers want more quick-meal solutions and convenience store items. Big Y will add lottery products, tobacco, greeting cards, balloons, gift cards, an expanded selection of grab-and-go items and beverages. Coolers at the store already are starting to look a little bare, but employees said that the site is only drawing down inventory ahead of the shutdown. Apparently some grocery items and cooler space will be eliminated. But fresh fruits and veggies will still be available. Gone will be items like canned goods, now stocked in the center of the store. The Tower Square Big Y is scheduled to reopen on July 21. Big Y opened in Tower Square two years ago in July 2023, taking over what had most recently been a CVS drugstore that also had access to the street. The store was subsidized by a $1 million city grant funded by the American Rescue Plan Act. The grant was meant to support the opening of a full-service grocery store in the downtown. But there were growing pains and the difficulty of stocking a store that appeals to downtown residents, as well as to workers in Tower Square and nearby buildings. There is often little foot traffic on weekends, for example. A few months after it opened, Charles L. D'Amour, executive chairman of the Big Y board, told The Republican that the company was still adjusting the product mix. The store opened with a coffee station and sushi. It appears busy, especially in the mornings and at lunchtime. Trump cancels $87 million grant for planned low-carbon cement plant in Holyoke Springfield Pride headliner Dawn Richard told 'Diddy' jurors of threats, violence, abuse Breeze Airways adds new flights from Bradley to NC Read the original article on MassLive.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
‘Hollywood South' could be established in Louisiana with new legislation
BATON ROUGE, La. (KTAL/KMSS) – Film Louisiana announced Governor Jeff Landry's signing of Senate Bill 232 (SB 232) into law on Monday. Louisiana Public Broadcasting to honor six students across the state as young heroes It includes Act 44, a law that makes Louisiana one of the most competitive states for film production. 'Act 44 modernizes the state's film incentive program by granting Louisiana Economic Development (LED) the authority to manage the program through administrative rules instead of state law. This change provides the flexibility needed to respond quickly to industry shifts, better negotiate with studios, and attract a wider range of film and television projects to the state,' a press release stated. The bill makes large-scale productions and episodic series more attractive in the state by keeping the $125 million annual cap and 2031 sunset date while eliminating per-person and per-project caps. 'Chef Niema Day,' winner of Food Network's Beat Bobby Flay recognized 'This is a game-changer,' said Jason Waggenspack, President of Film Louisiana. 'With SB 232 now signed, Act 44 means we're equipped to compete with the biggest players on a global scale. It's a win for our workforce, our small businesses, and the creative economy that defines Louisiana. 'The passage of Act 44 reflects years of hard work and collaboration with industry stakeholders. It's not just policy—it's a promise to the thousands of Louisianans who earn a living through film that our state has their back. 'We and the entire board of Film Louisiana extend our sincere gratitude to Governor Jeff Landry, LED Secretary Susan Bourgeois, legislative champions, the MPA, and the many local professionals and unions that all advocated tirelessly to ensure this law became reality.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.