PRSRT STD U.S. POSTAGE
GBJ P.O. Box 766 Saratoga Springs, NY 12866
VOL. 33 NO. 04
PAID
GLENS FALLS, NY 12801 PERMIT #600
HH The Business Newspaper of Warren and Washington Counties HH
www.glensfallsbusinessjournal.com
JUNE 2021
The Glen At Hiland Meadow To Add Aerial Treetop Adventure Park Is One Of The Wellness Center, Pool and Memory Care Unit Attractions At West Mountain This Summer
There are approximately 110 residents living in The Glen at Hiland Meadow, which has 74 independent living apartments and 18 independent living two-bedroom cottages. BY CHRISTINE GRAF The Glen at Hiland Meadow has received approval for a $11.9 million expansion of its Queensbury senior living facility. The project also includes the construction of a 4,700 square-foot wellness center with a pool and a $8.8 million 30-unit memory care facility. It is a joint venture between The Conkling Center and The Eddy. There are approximately 110 residents living in The Glen, which has 74 independent living apartments and 18 independent living twobedroom cottages. It is full-service retirement community with a dining room, grill room, lounge, library, and multi-purpose room. Transportation, maintenance, and housekeeping are provided to residents and an on-site social worker is available to connect them with outside services.
Courtesy The Glen at Hiland Meadow
“We typically do have a waiting list to get in, and we’ve been planning this expansion for some time. This was part of the original plan of development to bring us to 120 apartments and cottages,” said Andrea Hebert, executive director at the Glen and vice president of Eddy Senior Living. “We will be adding 28 apartments on the north side of the building with a view of West Mountain. We are also adding 30 units of memory care which will be a separate building.” Construction of the independent living apartments is expected to begin in the coming weeks. The building permit for the memory care facility will most likely be issued within the next several weeks. Sano-Rubin Construction Services of Albany is the developer for the project. Richard E. Jones Associates of Queensbury is the architect Continued On Page 11
West Mountain opened an array of outdoor activities on June 5, including the new Aerial Treetop Adventure Park. Adventure Center highlights at the ski center include biking, hiking, aerial treetop tours, mountaintop picnics, scenic chairlift rides, and more. West Mountain has more than 20 crosscountry and downhill mountain biking and hiking trails, as well as multiple mountaintop locations to enjoy our popular picnic packages. The Aerial Treetop Adventure Park, located at the top of West Mountain, offers a high ropes adventure experience that includes a scenic chairlift ride. “We are looking forward to welcoming guests back to West Mountain and celebrating the beginning of summer,” said Sara Montgomery, general manager of West Mountain. “After an incredible winter season, we look forward to keeping the momentum going with our outdoor Adventure Center activities, exercise, camps and family fun. West Mountain will continue to follow its ‘best clean environment’ practices this summer to ensure everyone stays healthy.” Tickets are available to buy online at www. WestMountain.com. Certain activities such as Aerial Treetop Adventure and the Mountaintop Picnic Package require purchasing online up to 24 hours in advance of a visit. West Mountain is located at 59 West Mountain Road, just three miles off Exit 18 of the Northway in Queensbury For the summer season, West Mountain is open 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on weekends in June and seven days a week beginning July 4 through Labor Day weekend through Oct. 17. The all-new five-acre Aerial Treetop Adventure Park offers six high ropes courses for all different ability levels, beginners to advanced. After taking the chairlift to the park, adventurers are met by the West Mountain climbing crew who outfit guests with helmets and harnesses before participating in a safety
A customer enjoys the zipline experience at West Mountain. Courtesy West Mountain
clinic. Adventurers will then climb up to a treetop platform to begin their journey through rope spider webs, zip lines, log waves and more. After climbing, adventurers return to the base area by chairlift. Guests begin their tour when they load the chairlift (launch time) every half hour from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Customers should arrive 15 minutes before launch time. Aerial treetop tickets include two hours in the park and the chairlift ride to the park and back to the lodge (approximately three hours). Picnic lunches, packaged in an eco-friendly box and placed in a picnic basket, are prepared daily by staff. The facility this year has added a wine (or beer) and charcuterie picnic package for adults 21 and older. Picnics can be picked up at the ticket window between 11 a.m. and 4 p.m. West Mountain can be reached at 518-6363699. Visit www.westmountain.com for a full list of upcoming events.
Arrow Financial Will Renovate, In Stages, Lake George Tourism Officials Anticipate A Its Headquarters In Downtown Glens Falls Strong Year As Pandemic Rules Are Relaxed Arrow Financial Corp., parent company of Glens Falls National Bank and Saratoga National Bank, has plans for a major renovation of its longtime headquarters at 250 Glen St. in downtown Glens Falls. The project will begin in stages in the coming months and involves exterior and interior improvements, replacement of aging building equipment with new, energyefficient systems, creation of a new lobby for customer transactions and development of additional space for lending and corporate offices, company officials said. “As we prepare for anticipated growth in customer transactions, the proposed renovations to our headquarters will provide more efficient and flexible working space that can be adapted to the needs of our Arrow team, our customers and our business and will help us streamline processes and consolidate technology,’’ said Thomas J. Murphy, president and CEO of Arrow Financial Corp. The project is expected to be completed in early 2023. MLB Construction Services of Malta is the general contractor for the project and the architect is JMZ Architects & Planners PC in
The Arrow Financial Corp. offices in this building will be renovated starting this year. Courtesy Arrow Financial Corp.
Glens Falls. “We also propose to update obsolete heating, ventilation and air conditioning equipment with new energy-saving systems, while creating an attractive new lobby for the main branch of our subsidiary Glens Falls Continued On Page 10
BY JILL NAGY Officials at the Lake George and Adirondack Area Chambers of Commerce are gearing up for a blockbuster summer for tourism. In Lake George, reservations for lodging are meeting or exceeding 2019, which was already “a banner year,” according to Amanda Metzger, marketing director for the Lake George Regional Chamber of Commerce. Memorial Day weekend, despite rain, “was not slow here at all,” she said. Forced indoors, visitors flooded museums and other indoor venues, she said. Some 760 of them registered at the visitors’ center that weekend. More than 1,800 people used a last minute lodging website the week before Memorial Day. Michael Bittel, president and CEO of the Adirondack Regional Chamber of Commerce, was also enthusiastic. All signs point to a “very robust active summer,” he said. “They are coming to swim, kayak, and bicycle as well as hike.” Rental bicycles are available through Warren County at bicycle stops provided by CDPHP. Hikers are coming to the area. Both officials said there are many first-time visitors, most of them from New York state, including New York City and the Capital District, as well as neighboring states. Because the border is closed, the usual influx of Canadian visitors is missing but, according to Bittel, New Yorkers who cannot go to Canada are making up
for the deficit. But, “We need that border open,” he said, so they can entertain both local and Canadian visitors. “We hope to welcome (Canadians) back soon. We can’t wait,” Metzger said. She said representatives of the Lake George chamber usually attend a travel show in Montreal but were unable to do so this year. “Many entities, public and private, have come together as one voice,” in an effort to encourage the opening the New York-Canada border, Bittel said. An issue the tourism is struggling with, however, is the shortage of workers. In a typical summer, some 1,000 international students on J-1 visas work in hotels, restaurants, and tourist attractions in Lake George, Metzger noted. This year, only a few are trickling in. Employers are trying to fill the gap with local high school students. They staged a job fair and reached out to local high schools. Elsewhere in the area, employers sought help from Warren County Employment and Training, Bittel said. ARCC is looking forward to the fall with live events from September on, beginning with a business awards dinner. Then, “more surprises to come,” he promised. While pleased with the activity in the area, Bittel is not surprised. “We live in the most beautiful area in the world,” he said.