Mainebiz

June 13, 2022

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V O L . X X V I I I N O. X I I J U N E 1 3 , 2 0 2 2 18 L E W I S T O N / A U B U R N / W E S T E R N M A I N E E arlier this year, Mainebiz honored Amber Lambke as one of its Business Leaders of the Year. Lambke was at the center of Skowhegan's downtown revitalization, converting the former Somerset County jailhouse into a grist mill for Maine Grains Co. Maine Grains' growth has, in turn, spun off other businesses. Visiting with Lambke at the Maine Grains site, it was clear she'd helped propel the growth but is now watching as other small busi- nesses grow around her. A decade into Maine Grains' tenure in the former jail building, there is now the grist mill, a commu- nity radio station; a retail store selling Maine Grain Welder/fabricator Garrett Veinotte at Maine Wood Heat Co. P H O T O S / F R E D F I E L D SKOWHEGAN comes alive A downtown rebirth draws on a collective effort B y P e t e r V a n A l l e n Amy Rowbottom with a cheese wheel outside her Crooked Face Creamery. Nathan Pooler, left, and Benjamin Wehry prepare the clay-based inner core of an oven at Maine Wood Heat Co. The Bankery & Skowhegan Fleuriste is an artisanal bakery, cake shop and florist in a 19th century bank building. F O C U S

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