View Full Version : Forest Hills Village
pharmerdave
02-05-2007, 10:12 PM
Here is a link to some proposed transit oriented developments in eastern Massachusetts. There are some scetchs of Westwood Square, Canton Town Center, downtown Lowell and my personal favorite, Forest Hills Village. The Forest Hills Village proposal includes covering up the exposed Orange Line tracks with apartments and Southwest Corridor Park as well as 2500 units of housing. The sketch-ups reveal two or three 20 story buildings. It also appears that they will bring the Arborway back to a grade level avenue.
http://www.railvolution.com/rv2005_pdfs/rv2005_312c.pdf
vanshnookenraggen
02-05-2007, 11:23 PM
This looks great. Too bad those towers probably won't survive.
kmp1284
02-05-2007, 11:27 PM
I like what I see. Where does this stand in the permitting process, or is it just some long term pipe dream?
shiz02130
02-05-2007, 11:57 PM
This looks fantastic. It's almost like Boston is looking a little more toward what actually works in great cities (like the ones in Europe).
Corey
02-06-2007, 12:33 AM
That plaza area looks beautiful indeed.
tmac9wr
02-06-2007, 10:18 AM
The style of drawing on page 14 is nearly identical to the old sketchup of Gateway Center. Even the style of development itself bears a great resemblance, though on a smaller scale. It even has that short curved roof tower on the left side. Either way, I think this looks like a great idea and is a great way to develop outside of the city. Hopefully this isn't just a pipedream and people are actually working on getting this in motion.
bosdevelopment
02-06-2007, 11:38 AM
The style of drawing on page 14 is nearly identical to the old sketchup of Gateway Center. Even the style of development itself bears a great resemblance, though on a smaller scale. It even has that short curved roof tower on the left side. Either way, I think this looks like a great idea and is a great way to develop outside of the city. Hopefully this isn't just a pipedream and people are actually working on getting this in motion.
I too, noticed the uncanny resemblance to Gateway center... Coincidence? I think not. Possibly some intern made the renderings? Probably.
Joe_Schmoe
02-06-2007, 01:28 PM
I have a major problem with the Forest Hills plan. Instead of those mega-blocks each with a useless enclosed courtyard, there should be a street running through there lined with residences. Then you would have enough space left over to make a decent sized town common. We still have not learned how to reject the 1950s style planning.
Here's what I mean:
http://i21.photobucket.com/albums/b291/Joe_Schmoe/foresthills/ForrestHills.jpg
Roxxma
02-06-2007, 02:00 PM
I could be mistaken, but this seems to be more of a "look what we could do" type of plan, rather than something that is actually in the works. Isn't the MBTA Arborway bus garage under construction on part of that site?
Ron Newman
02-06-2007, 02:05 PM
I certainly like the idea of removing the overpass. I never understood why it was repaired rather than removed a few years ago.
kz1000ps
02-06-2007, 03:52 PM
Joe_Schmoe, those blocks as shown are no more than 300 x 400 feet, or about 120k s.f. of land. For comparison's sake, a typical Back bay block is about 200 x 600 feet (exact same square footage), and the WTC site- the quintessential megablock- is roughly 800 x 850 feet (16 acres), so I don't really think you can level that term at these ones. The days of bite-size Beacon Hill blocks is long past, so I'd say what we got here isn't so bad.
I guess some kind of alley or pedestrian walkway could be nice, but my guess is that, like the Westwood Station (well, per Dude's informing - the Islington) plan, the center will have parking, which is a necessary evil in today's world. And while it'd be nice to put it underground, that of course costs a fair deal of more money.
Many dense European cities (Paris, Berlin, Vienna) have used the apartment block-with-courtyard model since the 18th century; it's hardly "1950s-style planning". It's an effective way to deliver light to the interiors of those buildings, and to entice those who would otherwise flee to the suburbs for private recreation space...without detracting from streetlife/the street wall. In Barcelona, where there is fairly loose zoning for such places, there are actually little industries and services like car washes in the courtyards!
If Tom Menino really wanted to leave a legacy, he would use the lame-duck period before his retirement to ram through similar hyper-densification schemes in at least these major transit notes in the city's southern triple-decker belt, dramatically expanding the size and quality of the city's housing stock...not to mention its affordability.
bdurden
02-06-2007, 06:02 PM
^and New Orleans.
And actually, when you think about it, the South End and Back Bay, though actually at lower densities in those cases. What would be the courtyards are those neighborhoods' alleys, gardens and back lot parking. And the alleys, at least, help keep city services like trash pickup off the main streets, where they would be unsightly and distasteful (as in New York, where blocks are nearly built solid).
DudeUrSistersHot
02-06-2007, 10:36 PM
Joe_Schmoe, those blocks as shown are no more than 300 x 400 feet, or about 120k s.f. of land. For comparison's sake, a typical Back bay block is about 200 x 600 feet (exact same square footage), and the WTC site- the quintessential megablock- is roughly 800 x 850 feet (16 acres), so I don't really think you can level that term at these ones. The days of bite-size Beacon Hill blocks is long past, so I'd say what we got here isn't so bad.
I guess some kind of alley or pedestrian walkway could be nice, but my guess is that, like the Westwood Station (well, per Dude's informing - the Islington) plan, the center will have parking, which is a necessary evil in today's world. And while it'd be nice to put it underground, that of course costs a fair deal of more money.
Just to clarify, I was saying that one of the links from the AB westwood station page was to a completely different, pipe-dream, unnecessary redevelopment of a different part of town, not saying that westwood station is in islington, which it really isnt.
heh, maybe im not clarifying anything here...
Scott
02-10-2007, 06:51 AM
There are community meetings on what should be built at Forest Hills and there is no solid plan yet.
The JP Gazzette has info on them.
The MBTA is about to put their Forest Hills parcels out to bid.
http://i3.photobucket.com/albums/y99/briv1/forest_hills_mbta_parcels.jpg
For more information see the BRA draft: http://www.cityofboston.gov/bra/pdf/PlanningPublications/Forest%20Hills%20MBTA%20DRAFT%20Invitation%20to%20 Bid%202008-05-08.pdf (http://www.cityofboston.gov/bra/pdf/PlanningPublications/Forest%20Hills%20MBTA%20DRAFT%20Invitation%20to%20 Bid%202008-05-08.pdf)
Or see this thread (http://www.archboston.org/community/showthread.php?t=2245)in the events section.
Lrfox
06-15-2008, 09:37 AM
Feature in the Homes section of today's Globe:
Question of congestion
Forest Hills proposal would add traffic, but planners see a solution
http://img29.picoodle.com/img/img29/4/6/15/f_12135318917m_e94d841.jpg (http://www.picoodle.com/view.php?img=/4/6/15/f_12135318917m_e94d841.jpg&srv=img29)
planners believe road changes can be made to ease traffic around the Forest Hills Station (above) is a transit-oriented housing and business complex is developed. (David L. Ryan / Globe Staff)
Can a development that adds scores of cars into an already congested area be "smart growth?"
more stories like this
That is the question looming over a plan to add 700 units of housing and other buildings in a tight configuration around the Forest Hills rail and bus station in Jamaica Plain.
The Forest Hills project is the largest so-called transit-oriented development yet undertaken by the MBTA in the Boston area. Such smart-growth projects are densely packed, mixed-use complexes built atop or near transit stations - whether suburban commuter rail stops or city MBTA stations - and promoted as an antidote to sprawl, congestion, and other attendant ills of the automobile age.
For city dwellers, the Forest Hills Station locale has much to recommend.
Pinched inside a dowdy old commercial district with several hip new outposts, the project would offer walk-on access to subway, bus, and train lines. The development could also fill in major missing elements of Forest Hills' commercial offerings with a grocery store, movie theater, and public plaza with a farmers market. Several gates to the Arnold Arboretum are just steps away, and Jamaica Plain center is not a far walk, either.
Yet outside its identity as a transit hub, Forest Hills is also a major chokepoint for traffic crossing the city in multiple directions, as well for commuters who drive to the station. Congestion on the two constricted main roads is a given at many times of the week. Traffic studies conducted as part of the planning process show that during the morning rush hour, more than 1,200 vehicles pass the station on Hyde Park Avenue heading toward Boston - about the same volume of traffic on Beacon Street as it approaches Kenmore Square.
Now add to that not just hundreds of new residents, but office workers at new commercial properties within the development, as well as shoppers drawn by new retail offerings, and there is a danger the Forest Hills development will make congestion worse.
"This is the most complicated aspect of this," said John Dalzell, project manager of the Forest Hills project for the Boston Redevelopment Authority, which spearheaded the planning process. The authority intends to have the development built according to "green" principles so that it wins certification from the US Green Building Council.
Not surprisingly, the city's transportation consultants have concluded that Forest Hills' traffic problems can be fixed. The city is already working on computerizing traffic signals to allow vehicles to more quickly move through intersections. The consultants estimate this alone will ease gridlock and free up capacity on the roads.
Also, the consultants, as well as Jamaica Plain residents who have participated in the planning, have come up with some "bold and brave" long-term strategies, Dalzell said. These include making Washington Street and Hyde Park Avenue one-way in opposite directions around the station. This plan would remove a lane from both roads and dedicate them to bicyclists and parking. While this would reduce the overall number of lanes, it doesn't mean more congestion. The idea is that with one-way streets, there would be three lanes of traffic traveling in one direction, providing better flow than two lanes heading in each direction...
--continued at: http://www.boston.com/realestate/news/articles/2008/06/15/question_of_congestion/?page=2
link to the article: http://www.boston.com/realestate/news/articles/2008/06/15/question_of_congestion/
*EDIT*
There was a map of the proposal in the paper that's not on the website, but it's just a watered-down version of the map in Briv's post.
From the JP Gazette:
T has a plan
By DAVID TABER June 13, 2008
Affordability concerns flood comments
FOREST HILLS?In response to community concerns about affordable housing on properties being sold for development around the Forest Hills T station, the MBTA last month unveiled a plan that gives financial incentives to developers to make housing affordable.
The plan would charge developers extra if they do not plan to build a certain number of affordable housing units. But some affordable housing advocates question whether it will work. Developers, they say, might just change their plans after the properties are sold.
Meanwhile, the Boston Redevelopment Authority (BRA) public comment period closed June 5 for Use and Design Guidelines developed as part of a community process?known as the Forest Hills Improvement Initiative (FHII)?that began in November 2006. The vast majority of comments submitted were in support of affordable housing, apparently the result of an organized letter-writing campaign.
The MBTA is planning issue an Invitation To Bid (ITB) to sell three parcels around the station outright and sell development rights to the Forest Hills station commuter parking lot.
Over 6 acres of land will be on the market under that ITB. The current draft guidelines call for 400 residential units and 64,000 square feet of retail space to be developed. Two other lots, the MBTA?s Arborway Yard and the privately owned Fitzgerald parking lot were also covered in the FHII process, but it is unclear if and when those sites will be up for development.
A draft version of the ITB was presented to the community at a May 22 meeting. The MBTA now hopes to officially issue it in late June or early July, after a June 26 FHII where the BRA will present the final version of the community guidelines.
MBTA plan
The MBTA is planning to offer the parcels with affordable housing in mind, but it has developed a unique pricing structure for the land that would require developers to pay more if they designate fewer than 50 percent of housing units affordable.
MBTA spokesperson Joe Pesaturo told the Gazette the MBTA plans to sell Parcel U?a 2.82-acre site on Hyde Park Avenue south of Ukraine Way?for $21.20 per square foot. The Use and Design Guidelines call for 150 housing units on that site. The ITB stipulates that if developers choose to make fewer than 50 percent of those units affordable ?they have to pay an additional $18.20 per square foot,? for the difference between the square footage of affordable space and the 50 percent mark, Pesaturo said.
There are similar requirements for Parcels S, V and W. Parcels V and W straddle Washington Street near parcel U and will be sold together. Parcel S is the MBTA station parking lot. The MBTA plans to lease that property with the stipulation that commuter parking be maintained.
According to the guidelines, all three parcels would contain a mix of housing and commercial space. The ITB says that if commercial space is built at the expense of affordable housing, the developer will be charges an additional $35 per square foot.
In their comments to the BRA, Bernie Doherty and David Hannon, of the Asticou-Martinwood Street Neighborhood Association, called for a similar property valuation plan for other parts of the community guidelines, including ?potential development of open space; recreational and community uses.?
Karen Caplan Doherty, also a member of the local neighborhood association, said in her comments that she is concerned the additional charge for commercial space might ?jeopardize the possibility for creative spaces and small retail.?
Affordable housing advocate Francesca Fordiani said she is ambivalent about the T?s plan. She said she is pleased the T is including some effort to promote affordable housing.
But she is concerned, she said, that there does not seem to be any mechanism for enforcement of affordability standards after the purchase-and-sale agreement is signed.
?At the [May 22] meeting I asked what would happen if the developer changes his mind. The answer was basically nothing,? she said.
Any proposed project will be subject to its own BRA-led community process, but Fordiani said she is concerned that the BRA will not be committed to affordability at that point.
The BRA controversially recently approved a proposal by Maple Hurst Builders for a much smaller mixed-use project on a formerly MBTA-owned lot on Green Street despite its failure to meet what appeared to be a specific mandate in the ITB calling for 50 percent affordability.
Affordability controversy
Affordable housing has been a hot-button issue throughout the process. Moves in recent months by the BRA to change the affordability language in the guidelines sparked outcry from some community members.
The draft guidelines?originally presented last November 2007?had recommended that that, on publicly owned land, between 15 percent and 75 percent of housing units should be sold and deed-restricted as affordable. The goal, the guidelines said, should be 50 percent affordability.
Affordable housing advocates complained that the guidelines were too vague and the 15 percent to 75 percent language was later removed. But since then it has been reinserted based on community response, said BRA senior architect John Dalzell, who has been leading the community process.
Housing affordability is tricky, Dalzell said, because the line between community and professional advocacy is sometimes blurry on the issue in JP, which is home to two active nonprofit community development corporations.
The public comments regarding the Use and Design Guidelines reflect some of that blurriness. The BRA received about 200 unique written comments according to its comment summary. But it also received about another 200 comments advocating for the removal of the 15 percent to 75 percent language in petitions, form letters and other letters that followed an obvious suggested format.
Other community members, Dalzell said, ?Are really irate that there is so much single-issue advocacy going on?There are some people who feel like some of this is about business as much as it is about housing.?
While the BRA?s job of gauging community sentiment and reflecting it in the guidelines requires that it be aware of those dynamics, ?There are board members of community development corporations who also live in the community,? he said. ?It?s not a big deal. No one should be out of the room.?
According to the Gazettes count, 34 of the unique comments the BRA received were in favor of more affordability, and 11 expressed support for giving developers more latitude. The latter, however, were almost all from street addresses in the Forest Hills area, whereas a significant portion of the former came from people who live in other sections of JP, suggesting that they may have been inspired by advocacy efforts as well.
The situation is awkward, Dalzell said, because, ?A lot of people care about affordable housing but don?t see it the same way? as the organized housing advocates.
Doherty and Hannon complained that, ?The document, as it is presently constructed is a formula for the diminution and destruction of a vibrant and growing community,? and that the FHII process had been ?hi-jacked by special interests.?
Another member of that local neighborhood group, Jack Odell, wrote that he was ?pleased to find that the plan required the development to support a mix of income levels.?
Fordiani sits on the Jamaica Plain Neighborhood Council (JPNC) and head the JPNC Housing and Development Committee. She told the Gazette that the petition and form letter campaign had been largely organized by the JPNC, a volunteer body.
?The JPNC was a big driver there,? she said.
But other organizations, including the Jamaica Plain Neighborhood Development Corporation (JPNDC), a nonprofit developer, also helped organize the campaign, she said.
Fordiani and Dalzell did offer opposite predictions for what the effect of the 50 percent guideline would accomplish.
Fordiani said that she is afraid that nonprofit developers will not be able to afford to bid on the project if the asking price in the ITB does not take the 50 percent affordability rate into account. Dalzell said other community members are concerned that the parcel would only be of interest to nonprofit developers.
Density and safety
Significant among opinions expressed by Forest Hills community members during the BRA public comment period were concerns about the density of proposed developments and public safety issues in the Forest Hills area.
A number of comments said a proposed seven-story structure at the MBTA parking lot site would be too tall. Many complained that it would block their view of the Arboretum.
Local resident Jessica Burko suggested, ?Redistribution of the uses at [the MBTA lot] onto other parcels would help allay concerns about its density.?
Doherty and Hannon echoed that comment, saying, ?The original vision proposed centering Forest Hills at the MBTA station as a core for commercial, retail and community use and having mixed use and residential development fanning out from the station.?
Caplan Doherty noted that site is in two police jurisdictions, E-13 and E-18. ?Who would be responsible for policing the leased MBTA space?? she asked.
She also said that attempts to deal with other public safety issues in a part of the FHII process aimed at generating transportation and streetscape guidelines for the area was redundant.
?The short term transportation recommendations are ones that this community suggested over five years ago.?
Those proposals include making the roadways around the station more comprehensible to motorists and pedestrians by improving signage and pavement markings.
?A full vetting of all of the public safety issues must occur prior to the MBTA ITB process moving forward,? she said.
vanshnookenraggen
06-15-2008, 01:14 PM
If there's that much traffic maybe they should extend the Orange Line.
Oh wait, that won't happen.
I think one big failure with TODs is that they base development around transit hubs that are already highly congested. Turning Hyde Park Ave and Washington St into one-way highways is a typical highway engineer solution that will turn the area into an in hospitable highway. If there is that much traffic coming from the south then how about some transit-oriented solutions? If extending the Orange Line is too much, how about looking at opening up some more commuter rail stations in Roslindale and Hyde Park?
I'm sure I'm not the only person who has thought of this, but what I'm also sure of is that this option was probably taken off the table 'cause everyone know the T couldn't afford to build a new station. How are TODs supposed to work if the transit doesn't?
The city's affordable housing requirement is feeble and foolish. It does absolutely nothing to bring down housing costs--it likely accomplishes the complete opposite. The only way to bring down housing costs is to build more housing--way, way more. The community's simultaneous demands of more affordable housing and lower density are dumbfounding.
As far as the fear that development will increase traffic: who cares. This development will be built over a major public transportation node (bus, subway and commuter rail)! As long as this new development will contain some of the necessities--like a supermarket--then why the hell do you even need a car?
If it were up to me, cars and traffic would not even be a factor in Boston's planning decisions. The city is way over its car capacity as it is and nothing can be changed to remedy this short of leveling it entirely and starting over. Boston was simply not built for cars--at least not this kind of volume. We have to accept this. Planning in this city should be indifferent to cars and focus exclusively on people.
AdamBC
06-15-2008, 04:50 PM
So the best solution is a single family home on half an acre, near a subway, but with a two car garage? That costs 100K? Good luck... maybe these people should move to Nebraska.
PaulC
04-09-2012, 04:09 PM
No bids on T parcel, deadline shifts
March 2, 2012
By Rebeca Oliveira
(Courtesy Illustration) Parcel U is the long rectangle at the center of the map.
FOREST HILLS—The MBTA has not received any bids in its third attempt to sell a surplus parcel south of the Forest Hills T Station on Hyde Park Avenue. The bidding deadline was extended to this week.
The parcel was offered at a reduced price, MBTA spokesperson Joe Pesaturo previously told the Gazette. Bidding documentation states the minimum price for purchase as $1.1 million. Its 2007 asking price was $1.65 million.
Bids were originally due Feb. 15, but the deadline was extended to Feb. 29, after the Gazette’s press time, due to a lack of bids.
Parcel U, encompassing almost 123,000 square feet, is one of a handful of parcels that the T has been trying to sell, with limited success, since 2007.
The Forest Hills Improvement Initiative (FHII) Use and Design Guidelines, completed in 2008, dictate that Parcel U should house locally-supportive businesses such as hardware stores, bookstores or dry cleaners.
It also states that 4,000 square feet should be set aside for community use in housing something like a day care facility. It further asks for 150 housing units, half of which should be affordable; 130 residential parking spaces; and for 30,000 square feet, or 24 percent of the parcel’s area, to be left as open space.
Parcel U is bounded by Hyde Park Avenue on the west and Ukraine Way on the north. It extends just south of Walk Hill Street. It is also on a steep incline down to the commuter rail tracks on its eastern boundary.
Parcels V and W, subject to the same FHII guidelines, were sold in 2009 and are developed by local developer WCI Corp. A new Harvest Co-op Market and a bank are slated to open there in September.
The MBTA is required by law to sell to the highest qualified bidder. Adherence to the Boston Redevelopment Authority’s (BRA’s) Use and Design Guidelines, which were developed with input from the community and will be sent out with the parcel documentation, will determine if a bidder is qualified.
http://jamaicaplaingazette.com/2012/03/02/no-bids-on-t-parcel-deadline-shifts/
JohnAKeith
04-09-2012, 07:35 PM
The Forest Hills Improvement Initiative (FHII) Use and Design Guidelines, completed in 2008, dictate that Parcel U should house locally-supportive businesses such as hardware stores, bookstores or dry cleaners.
It also states that 4,000 square feet should be set aside for community use in housing something like a day care facility. It further asks for 150 housing units, half of which should be affordable; 130 residential parking spaces; and for 30,000 square feet, or 24 percent of the parcel’s area, to be left as open space.
Well,with restrictions like that, I'm SHOCKED no one bid.
found5dollar
04-09-2012, 08:45 PM
Well,with restrictions like that, I'm SHOCKED no one bid.
seriously...
HenryAlan
04-09-2012, 09:14 PM
The open space requirement is particularly annoying for this location. It's not like there are any decent parks nearby.
Lurker
04-09-2012, 09:38 PM
The city's affordable housing requirement is feeble and foolish. It does absolutely nothing to bring down housing costs--it likely accomplishes the complete opposite. The only way to bring down housing costs is to build more housing--way, way more. The community's simultaneous demands of more affordable housing and lower density are dumbfounding.
It's not "the community" making demands. It is the few interested parties which stand to make a lot of money off the construction of subsidized housing while rewarding their foot soldiers. A 'community' or 'affordable' developer gets to make a profit on a development with no financial risk to them, as that risk is picked up by taxpayers, and the people which agitated on behalf of that subsidized developer get paid off with cheap rent in new construction. Happens all the time and is a big part of of the reason why I hate CDCs. They always claim the mantle of 'the community' and helping people when in reality its a shakedown of everyone else to reward themselves and their supporters.
The BRA's 'affordable' housing funds virtually never get used in the neighborhoods in which they are collected. They go into a general slush fund for 'affordable' housing which never has been very well accounted for. Go ahead and try searching for the information. You won't find it. The city can't give an accurate accounting of where all the money has gone, how many units have been built with the funds, and what the average cost has been per unit 'affordable' housing. The whole thing is nothing but legalized extortion to pay off political allies and constituencies. We are talking about hundreds of millions of dollars and thousands of units of 'affordable' housing which somehow hasn't been spent or built in the past decade without the local press insomuch as batting an eyelash.
BeeLine
01-05-2013, 09:45 AM
Parcel U. Looks like this project may happen.
http://www.boston.com/yourtown/news/jamaica_plain/2013/01/developer_eyes_40m_mixed-use_p.html
By Matt Rocheleau, Town Correspondent
A developer plans to buy MBTA-owned property in the Forest Hills section of Jamaica Plain to build an estimated $40 million mixed-use project.
The development would be about 130,000 square feet consisting of about 120 housing units, 10,000 square feet of retail space, and about 120 parking spaces, according to Kamran Zahedi, president of Urbanica, the development company.
The Boston-based firm submitted a $1,050,000 bid to buy the 2.8-acre site along Hyde Park Avenue called “Parcel U,” which the MBTA has been trying to sell for the past several years, according to T spokesman Joe Pesaturo.
Zahedi said by phone Friday he is hopeful construction would begin in the summer of 2014. He said the project would take about three years to complete and would likely be built in phases.
He said his company plans to start design on the project within the next month and begin the process to seek city approval within the next six months.
The T’s developer designation conditions allow Urbanica up to 18 months to secure city permits and zoning approval.
Zahedi said his company plans to market the housing to people from a mix of income levels. The project will include some units designated as affordable housing, he said.
He estimated about 64 of the units would be marketed as for-sale and would be situated across a series of townhouse buildings. The other 56 units would likely be housed in one building and rented.
But, he said the breakdown of how the units will be sold and at what price is likely to depend on potential changes dictated by the housing market and the city approval process.
The project will be designed to reach high standards for energy-efficiency, Zahedi said.
Urbanica’s plans for Parcel U were first reported on by the Jamaica Plain Gazette (http://jamaicaplaingazette.com/2013/01/04/major-housing-stores-coming-to-t-parcel/).
A community planning initiative completed in fall 2008 suggested Parcel U should contain 120 housing units, 5,000 square feet of retail, 30,000 square feet of open space, 4,000 square community space and about 120 residential parking spots along with bicycle parking.
Parcel U (http://www.boston.com/yourtown/news/jamaica_plain/2012/02/mbta_tries_for_third_time_to_s.html?camp), located near where JP and Roslindale meet, was first put up for sale by the MBTA in a public bid process in fall 2008. The public transit agency then asked for a minimum bid of $1.6 million.
The MBTA reoffered the property in several rounds of bidding with lower minimum prices. But no bids were received until the latest round in which Urbanica was chosen as the developer.
Two other sites, “Parcel V” and “Parcel W” were bought in a package deal from the MBTA and are under development (http://www.boston.com/yourtown/news/jamaica_plain/2012/12/harvest_co-op_store_opens_toda.html?camp).
The MBTA has tried to lease a fourth site in that area, a 3.16-acre parking lot called “Parcel S.” But no bids were received in an initial round and the agency has no current plans to reoffer the parcel, Pesaturo said this week.
E-mail Matt Rocheleau at mjrochele@gmail.com.
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LINK (http://www.boston.com/yourtown/news/jamaica_plain/2013/01/developer_eyes_40m_mixed-use_p.html)
http://i3.photobucket.com/albums/y99/briv1/nov11site_zps8199ab9f.jpg
What's with the seemingly arbitrary gaps between every few buildings?
Ron Newman
01-05-2013, 01:22 PM
Maybe to charge a little extra for some of the houses, because they will also have side windows and not just front and back?
vanshnookenraggen
01-05-2013, 01:45 PM
A parking spot for every housing unit? TOD-FAIL.
Nexis4jersey
01-05-2013, 02:22 PM
A parking spot for every housing unit? TOD-FAIL.
Can't they put it under the units in the back?
KentXie
01-07-2013, 08:16 AM
A parking spot for every housing unit? TOD-FAIL.
Just because there's a train station doesn't mean that the person shouldn't be given the right to own a car and just because a person owns a car, doesn't mean that person won't use Mass Transit. They are not exclusive. Plus, you can charge more per person without having to clog up the street with parked cars.
Hutchison
01-07-2013, 08:16 AM
A parking spot for every housing unit? TOD-FAIL.
Doesn't what is basically suburban TOD require parking? Let's be honest and admit that there really is very little at Forest Hills right now and that Roslindale Village and South JP are just far enough away that people aren't going to walk all the time (1+ miles each). Also people are going to have to drive to get to a real grocer unless they take the orange line up to Jackson sq. to shop at the Stop & Shop up there
DominusNovus
01-08-2013, 03:36 PM
And enterprising residents that don't drive a car could always lease out their parking spot to some commuter. ;)
Randomgear
01-08-2013, 04:17 PM
One thing that most certainly isn't good are 30 individual driveways backing up to Hyde Park Ave. It would be much better to have communal parking in the back.
Benefits: minimizing curb cuts onto Hyde Park Ave and financial encouragement to use public transportation, walk or bike. Monies from the Condo association/developer could be used for snow removal for both the driveway parking area as well as sidewalks.
Ron Newman
01-08-2013, 09:18 PM
It looks to me like there is one shared driveway in the middle, that leads to underground parking for all of these townhouses.
HenryAlan
01-09-2013, 09:03 AM
It looks to me like there is one shared driveway in the middle, that leads to underground parking for all of these townhouses.
Agreed. People are looking at the pedestrian walk to the front door and thinking it's a driveway. That's what I saw at first, too, but you are absolutely right. There are only two dirveways in that drawing, one that is between the commercial building and the town houses, and the other that bisects the townhouse blocks.
I like the way this looks, it will be very good for the Hyde Park side. Hopefully, we'll start to see some domino effect, with one project stimulating value in the next one. Even at full build, the map at the end of the linked article doesn't have enough to make Forest Hills become a full fledged urban experience, but at least it won't have as many stretches of empty no man's land.
Randomgear
01-10-2013, 10:25 AM
Oops, time to get my eyes checked!
As far as grocers go, Harvest Naturals just opened about 1/4 mile away across the tracks on Washington St.
Once the Casey Overpass comes down and the surface roads are finished in 2016, this area should be posed to take off. If only the MBTA would greenlight the Arborway Yard project.
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