New proposal reflects diversifying East End in Portland
The plan for a four-story building with homes and businesses adds to other upscale projects going up on Munjoy Hill.
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The latest project on Munjoy Hill is planned at 118 Congress St., now the site of a one-story building and a parking lot. The building would be demolished and replaced by a four-story building with businesses on the first floor and homes on three levels.
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Interesting article today in the Press Herald:
http://www.pressherald.com/news/Portland_considers_reclaiming_discontinued_street_.html
Could this perhaps finally spur some development of the Top of the Old Port parking lot?
The paper street in question:
https://maps.google.com/maps?hl=en&ll=43.660687,-70.255626&spn=0.001515,0.002401&t=m&z=19
I remember when Wilmot Street went to congress street. first Baptist church use to be there
For those who never saw it (and who have Facebook), the Lincoln Square model can be seen at the indispensable Portland History group.
If you want my honest opinion, this will ensure the site is not developed if the street is reclaimed and instituted. Now, if the City merely stakes a claim on the street to use as leverage, that is less cause for concern regarding future development potential, because it will only add to the City's leverage but not preclude development. But if this becomes a fully functional street again the chances that it remains that way are greater, with a corresponding increase in the chance that this land does not get developed. Why? Because the real estate price is so high that a high floor area ratio is necessary to induce development, in order to ensure an attractive return on investment. To get a suitable FAR, a big building is necessary. This area is adjacent to major thoroughfares, and therefore office use is most likely for any development. However, modern office buildings and their uses require large floor plates, not narrow ones--this is part of the reason why the Fidelity Trust building on Congress Street proposed a 15 story addition, where the former Public Market now stands, which would have enabled it to compete with One City Center etc. By disaggregating the parcels here, a project like Lincoln Square (1988) or Lincoln Center (2004) becomes less feasible, and the smaller projects while still possible from s structural standpoint become unaffordable. The land will be most profitable as a parking lot, as has been the case for 25 years.
Thanks Mark,
That photo is a copy of a scan uploaded to this site based on a picture provided by one of the members. The facebook page is also hosted by a member of this site. Cool project!
I think it would take a mixed use type of structure to achieve the height (250 ft) and or floor count (20) on that parcel. The building could combine residential, office, parking and possibly even hotel space to accomplish this lofty goal.
This concept is becoming a popular approach in cities all around the country. Would be nice to lure either UNUM, WEX or IDEXX downtown for the location of their corporate headquarters or regional in UNUM's case.
Agreed. Wasn't Boulos' proposed tower there going to be mized use?
Unum will never leave their Congress Street campus. They like that location and actually moved their executive offices from One City Center to that campus in the early 2000's. They put a lot of money into building the HO3 building and renovating the HO1 and HO2 buildings, and I’m pretty sure they own all three of those outright.
With the money IDEXX is dumping into their campus in Westbrook with the new building they just completed (which I keep meaning to get a picture of and post here) and another potential addition in a few years, I doubt their going to move now. The time to lure them was a few years ago before they decided to plant their roots in Westbrook.
WEX is the wild card here. They've been tied to the office building proposed at Thompson's Point, but they've also stated their desire to grow at their current location (and judging by what I can see on Google Maps, it appears they have the space to grow there). You can't rule them out completely, but the time to get them to commit to a new tower in Downtown Portland would be over the next two years. After that they're going to follow Unum and IODEXX and plant their roots somewhere for the long-term.
Outside of WEX, I can't think of any other local company that is large and/or growing enough to occupy a significant amount of office space in a new downtown tower. The only other candidate could be an insurance company that might want to increase its presence here and feed off to the Unum training grounds (as Aetna and Prudential have already done and The Standard did before closing their local office about five years ago). Maybe United Health Group?
There are some smaller companies with huge potential that don’t seem to be growing very fast, like Immucell. Are there any growing IT start-ups around here that might take off eventually?