THE GEORGE E. FRANCHERE
EDUCATION CENTER

The George E. Franchere Education
Center is the newest building added to the Mabee Farm Historic
Site in Rotterdam Junction, NY. The oldest,
of course, is the Mabee farmhouse that dates to 1705. The Education Center was conceived
in the
mid 1990s, shortly after the Farm was gifted to
the Society by George
Eugene Franchere. Architect Keith Cramer of Albany began its design in 2001; the decision to
name the
future building for
Mr. Franchere was formalized in 2004, the year of
his death; and fund raising began. After a ceremonial
ground breaking in
2009, the design was
completed; bids
were solicited; construction began in July 2010; and the ribbon cutting
for the finished building was held on October 7, 2011.
(See the Society's November-December
Newsletter.)
OBJECTIVES
The Franchere Center is a "green building," so called because of
its
solar panels on the roof of its picnic pavilion and for the
geothermal
heating and
cooling emanating from a closed system of 15 geothermal wells
sunk 400 feet into the ground. A new Club Car is available to transport
visitors to and
from the Center at 1100 Main Street to the historic part of the
Mabee Farm to the east at 1080 Main
Street. The principal reasons for the construction
of the Center were
to allow presentation of programs all year long and not just
seasonally; to provide badly needed space
for the storage and care of
artifacts; and to provide adequate space
for classroom instruction and historic displays.
ATTRIBUTES
The George E.
Franchere Ed Center consists
of three floors that comprise 13,000 square feet, most of which
supports formal programs held therein.
Necessarily, a
certain amount of space, mostly at the basement level, is
devoted to
operation of the extensive heating and cooling system
related to
the
geothermal system and to the solar panels that serve as the roof of the
picnic pavilion. The basement level consists of the John & Sally
van Schaick
Lecture Hall, a 120-seat area
that can serve as either a
dining room with a nearby kitchen or as the locus of
overhead projection of either a Blu-Ray
movie, a live HD TV program, or
educational presentations emanating from a laptop operated
by a guest
speaker, whether the content has been pre-
recorded or invoked live from
the Internet. The Hall is dividable into two isolated
sections, the
larger of which is supported by overhead projection and
the smaller by
a wall-mounted large-screen TV, one of five located throughout the
building.
The south-side entrance steps that lead up to the Dutch
door shown in
the photo are quite steep. For logistical reasons,
they had to be, and that has
rendered the south entrance
mostly ceremonial. There are two functional entrances on
the east side
with a ramp leading to each. The lower and level
one is recommended for
handicapped access. The leftmost and higher ramp brings one to
the main
entrance and thence into a reception area on what
is called the "first"
floor. Passing through after registration, one encounters a
warm and
welcoming gift shop, one that replaces the former gift shop that
was
crammed into the porch of the Mabee farmhouse. Straight ahead is
the
Orville & Marion Mabee Gallery,
currently the site of the fabulous Leonard
Tantillo display that consists of 50 of his original paintings
of historic New York State venues and themes, a display that will
run
through December 16.
To the immediate right of the main entrance is the
office of Patricia Barrot, Mabee Farm Site Manager. Further down the
corridor on that side of the floor
one passes the elevator, rest rooms,
and enters the Almy & Anne
Coggeshall Conference Room, which can comfortably
accommodate 22 persons for
meetings, supported by a telephone
and a large-screen TV usable as a computer monitor. The floor above,
the "second"
floor, contains office space for
Curator Ryan Mahoney and Associate
Curator-Archivist Erica Flanagan, plus a very large collections storage
area. This floor is not ordinarily open to the
public, but is
accessible to visiting researchers who make prior arrangements with the
Curator.
HOURS
From May through October,
both the Center and the Mabee farmhouse and grounds are open 10 a.m. to
4 p.m., Monday through Saturday. Visitors start
at the reception area,
where they elect to tour both sections of the Site for an
admission fee of $8, or one or the other for $5 (but
free to members
and
young children). From November through April, the Center hours are
the same, but the Mabee farmhouse is open only by prior appointment.
PUBLIC FACILITIES
In addition to its primary function in support of the mission of the
Schenectady County Historical Society, the Mabee Farm Historic Site in
general and its
George E. Franchere Center in particular serve as a
community center, the community being not just our neighbors in
Rotterdam
Junction, but also those
in our County and beyond who are interested in
occasional rental of our facilities. There have been, for years, a
certain number of weddings on the farm-
house grounds. Now, thee are likely to be many more, some of whose
celebrants will
want to bring in a caterer and use the van Schaick Lecture / Dining
Hall for their
reception. The rentable resources are:
<>The Edwin D. Reilly, Jr.
Picnic Pavilion, which
seats 108 people, six per
table, or 144 people, 8 per table, for picnics, clambakes,
summer
evening
dinners, or whatever your caterer is hired to provide.
>
$12 per person for
weddings or parties + $25 per hour.
$ 5 per person for picnics + $25 per hour.
$ 3 per person for non-profit organizations or community groups + $25
per hour.
- The Coggeshall
Conference Room (seating for 22).
$50 per hour.
$25 per hour for non-profit and community organizaitons.
(In either case, an additional $25 per hour must be assessed for usage
outside of our normal business hours.)
- The van Schaick dinner /
lecture hall (Seating for 120 at tables, 150 with chairs only.)
$12 per person for weddings or
banquets + $25 per hour.
$ 5 per person for non-profit or community groups + $25 per hour.
(In either case, an
additional $25 per hour must be assessed for usage outside of our
normal business hours.)
- The Mabee
Gallery, at times when there is no running display (Seating for
80 people, chairs only.)
$5 per person for
meetings + $25 per hour.
$3 per person for non-profit organizations or community groups + $25
per hour.
(In either
case, an additional $25 per hour must be assessed for usage outside of
our normal business hours.)
- The Dutch Barn on
the main part of the Site (Seating for 120 at tables, 150 with
chairs only.)
$12 per person for
weddings or parties + $25 per hour.
$ 5 per person for picnics + $25 per hour
$ 3 per person for non-profit organizations or community groups + $25
per hour.