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Pittsfield is in the Albany television market and is the community of license for two stations in that market, MyNetworkTV affiliate WNYA, and a low power TV station, W28DA, which rebroadcasts sister station and NBC affiliate WNYT on channel 13 from a location on South Mountain in the city.
The former Eaton factory complex is a series of connected brick buildings, set overlooking a bend in the Housatonic River southwest of downtown Pittsfield. The property is bounded on the north by railroad tracks, and was historically bounded on the east and south by a worker housing area; the latter has largely been obliterated by urban renewal activities.
The Berkshire Eagle is an American daily newspaper published in Pittsfield, Massachusetts, and covering all of Berkshire County, as well as four New York communities near Pittsfield. It is considered a newspaper of record for Berkshire County, Massachusetts .
MA 41, south of its junction with MA 23 42°08′53″N 73°25′01″W / 42.1481°N 73.4169°W / 42.1481; -73.4169 ( Westover–Bacon–Potts Egremont
Berkshire Mall was a shopping mall located in Lanesborough, Massachusetts outside Pittsfield. The mall was built in 1988 and closed in 2019. It could be reached from both Route 8 and U.S. Route 7. As of 2024, the mall's one remaining tenant is the Target anchor store.
The Wollison–Shipton Building is a historic commercial block located at 142-156 North Street in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. Designed by architect H. Neil Wilson , it was built in 1888 when the area north of Park Square developed as a commercial and retail part of downtown Pittsfield.
Artist Norman Rockwell resided in Stockbridge, MA. Singer-songwriter and guitarist James Taylor resides in Berkshire County. Author Edith Wharton kept a home in Lenox, MA. Actor Mark Wahlberg often spends time in Berkshire County, and has a residence in Pittsfield, MA. Actress Elizabeth Banks is from Pittsfield, MA. and often comes back and visits.
The William Russell Allen House is a historic house at 359 East Street in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. Built in 1886, it was the first local design of H. Neill Wilson, and is an important example of Shingle style architecture in Berkshire. It is also a rare surviving reminder of East Street's residential past.