A prime piece of state-owned land, at the southern entrance to downtown Boston, is going on the market.
Gov. Charlie Baker and Boston Mayor Martin J. Walsh said Tuesday they are seeking developers for a 5.5-acre site along Kneeland Street near South Station that’s now home to the Veolia North America steam plant and an office building for the Massachusetts Department of Transportation.
It’s the highest-profile parcel yet to be marketed in a new push by the Baker Administration to put state-owned land into the hands of private developers, to build housing and job-creating activities. The Kneeland Street site, they say, could house 1.5 million to 2 million square feet of new development, which would make it among the biggest projects in Boston’s current building boom.
First though, officials will canvas neighbors and community groups to see they want at the site. Public input sessions will begin in March to design “a broad set of goals,” a state spokesman said, which could include housing, commercial space or open space. After that, the state will issue a request for proposals, and eventually select a developer.
Veolia is partnering in the project, and any development would need to include “a scaled-down version” of the steam plant, state officials said. The nearly century-old plant helps to heat and cool many buildings in downtown Boston. MassDOT’s District 6 headquarters would either be relocated or replaced in the project.
The chance to redevelop such a big parcel downtown, alongside an offramp from the Southeast Expressway and one block from South Station, will likely attract a number of big-name developers.