Dartmouth’s Long-Awaited Recreation Center: What’s Next?

by Molly Armando | Tides Real Estate

Dartmouth has been talking about a recreation center for years. The vision is simple: a centralized space where the community can gather, especially during the school year. The reality has been more complicated.

The project stalled when the former town administrator left, and funding was temporarily redirected elsewhere. But after years of pauses and setbacks, Dartmouth is once again moving the idea forward.

How We Got Here

Back in 2019, Town Meeting approved $45,000 for a feasibility study to evaluate Dartmouth’s recreation needs. The study, completed in 2022, confirmed what many residents already knew: gym space is the number one priority.

Key findings included:

  • A three-court gym as the most practical design for community needs.

  • Strong community interest in an indoor walking track, appealing to all ages.

  • An estimated $14 million construction cost and $900,000 design cost.

By 2023, the conversation narrowed to three possible sites: Reed Road, the Council on Aging location, and the old police station on Russells Mills Road. The police station property emerged as the leading candidate thanks to its central location and nearby fields, though its history with legionella contamination has not been forgotten.

A Committee Steps In

Momentum picked up in early 2024. In January, the Select Board officially created a Recreation Center Building Committee to guide the project.

The committee includes:

  • Voting members from the Select Board, Park Board, Capital Planning, Finance, and three at-large residents.

  • Ex-officio members such as the Town Administrator, Director of Parks and Recreation, and Director of Budget and Finance.

Their job is to select and support an Owner’s Project Manager (OPM), hire a designer, and ensure residents remain part of the process.

By March 2024, the committee held its first meeting, focusing on choosing the OPM. This role will oversee planning, design, construction, and eventually, the facility’s closeout.

What It Could Look Like

The proposed design includes a triple gymnasium as the anchor, supported by team rooms, program rooms, restrooms, storage, and flexible meeting spaces.

It’s a design that prioritizes athletics while still creating space for multipurpose community use.

Balancing Dreams with Dollars

Of course, cost remains the central question. While the early estimate was $14 million, later conversations have placed a “simple” version closer to $20 million. In a recent survey, the recreation center ranked lower in priority than water treatment, wastewater upgrades, and the high school roof.

That doesn’t mean residents don’t want it: it means the town is weighing many needs at once.

What’s Next for Dartmouth

The Building Committee and town leaders are now exploring funding options, including state and federal grants and possible partnerships with UMass Dartmouth. Public workshops, beginning September 9, will give residents a direct say in shaping the project’s future.

At TIDES, we see this as more than a building. It’s a reflection of community priorities. Do we want a central place for kids, families, and neighbors of all ages to connect? Or do other infrastructure projects take precedence for now?

There’s no single answer, but being part of the conversation is what matters most.

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Molly Armando | Tides Real Estate
Molly Armando | Tides Real Estate

Broker | License ID: 9585698

+1(508) 817-6435 | molly@tidesre.com

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