?Revitalization? becoming a burning issue in Dudley Square

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?Revitalization? becoming a burning issue in Dudley Square
Dave Hadden (from the Bay State Banner)

Those shopping in Dudley Square in recent weeks may have found it hard to miss the new posters in most merchants? windows. ?Caution,? some of the posters read. ?Revitalization equals Gentrification!?

Spread throughout the square by local community group Save the Dudley Square Moms and Pops, the posters predict the hidden and perhaps harsher realities of a new Dudley Square.

These local merchants and activists are organizing a rally on June 3 at 12 p.m. at Citizens Bank to raise awareness about the potential impact of national franchises like Walgreens and Expressions on Dudley Square in the coming years.

Fearing that brand names and bulk prices will wipe out a number of local businesses, the group hopes to galvanize local residents and merchants to continue supporting each other and preserve decades of history.

?Changes like these are inevitable,? says Rusty Pendleton of Funky Fresh Records. ?However, people need to realize where their money is going and support the right places.? When asked what he would do if Tower Records were to open across the street, he jokingly said, ?I?d blow them up.?

The city-backed Dudley Main Streets Program has the same sense of urgency, but looks at the future from another perspective. The new chain stores, says Main Streets Executive Director Joyce Stanley, are largely a response to what the public has demanded.

?For ten years we?ve been working at making Dudley a more vibrant place,? Stanley explains. ?Our polls have shown that people aren?t shopping here mainly because of a lack of parking, safety, quality of goods and brand diversity.?

Stanley is quick to point out that Dudley Square must be seen in the context of the city?s expensive real estate market. ?These days you can?t purchase a building in Dudley for less than $1.5 million,? she said. ?Years ago, when no one wanted anything to do with us, this wasn?t the case.?

Roxbury?s demographics are also changing. From 1980 to 2000, the black population dropped from 78 to 66 percent, while the Hispanic population nearly doubled, rising from 13 to 25 percent. This growing ethnic diversity, combined with the prosperity of adjacent neighborhoods, is creating a greater demand for variety in Dudley.

These facts, however, do not negate the frustrations of local merchants, many of whom now feel alienated after working in the community during the hardest of times.

Kathy Kim, local activist and daughter of the owner of athletic shoe store Alpha Omega, recalls exclusively hiring youth from the community and ?dragging others back to the store by their ears if they were caught stealing.?

According to Kim, ?filling the square with chain retailers with no personal investment in the neighborhood is going to wipe out this sense of community.?

This history, particularly in terms of family-owned businesses, is rich indeed. Thirty-year-old Alpha Omega and 100-year-old Kornfield?s Pharmacy are the oldest independently owned stores of their kind in Boston. The same family has operated Looking Good for over 50 years.

According to the posters, merchants are claiming that they are not against chain retailers, but are opposed to ?unnecessary? ones that will dwarf services already provided by merchants already there.

And although change may be inevitable, both sides are scrambling for solutions to avoid a scenario where Dudley?s fate reads like another tale of urban gentrification.

Stanley?s proposed solution is quite simple ? provide assistance to the existing merchants. ?Now that the population is changing, the merchants have to change with them,? Stanley said. ?After 5 p.m., most of these stores close down and Dudley looks desolate. We need to come up with a plan to help these merchants grow in terms of marketing, service, and finding a niche.?

Stanley has also explored possibilities for economic incubators for new businesses like the current project at the Haffenreffer Brewery in Jamaica Plain.

The plans of the merchants, while somewhat similar, ring with more urgency and contempt.

?We?ve been asking for basic safety, parking, and utility services for years and have been ignored,? Kim said. ?We were ignored when these chains were given permission to move in. Now we?re going to ignore them in return.?

Left in the middle are city officials, torn between revitalizing Dudley with fancy new stores and preserving homegrown businesses.

Though Mayor Menino has said that he disapproves of the Walgreens, he has little power to decide what tenants a developer plans to work with.

In an attempt to come up with a happy medium, the Boston Redevelopment Authority and Dudley Main Streets met with local merchants earlier this month to explore ways to service the merchants in this changing business climate. By all accounts, they have a long way to go.

?While the preliminary city meetings are a start,? said City Councilor Chuck Turner, ?this dilemma shows that at this point, there is no real cohesive and thoughtful plan between residents, merchants, and developers on what direction Dudley?s development will take.?
 
New movement in Dudley Square:

"The authority [BRA] said it has closed on the acquisition of the 33,000 square-foot site that includes the five-story Ferdinand Building, which dates back to 1899, the eight story Guscott Building, circa 1922, and a vacant lot at the intersection of Washington and Warren Streets in Roxbury. The city plans to demolish the Guscott building and renovate the Ferdinand, each of which have been vacant for more than 25 years."

Full story at http://www.boston.com/business/ticker/2006/09/bras_dudley_squ.html
 
I'm actually amazed that Dudley Sq wasn't razed during Urban Renewal in the '50s.
 
Great, see you later, Dudley!

Let it fall into the abyss, then, if no one wants change.

More on the Ferdinand Building, from The Boston Business Journal:

BRA to demolish historic Roxbury building

http://www.bizjournals.com/boston/stories/2006/09/18/daily60.html?f=et54&hbx=e_du

The Boston Redevelopment Authority has acquired the historic Ferdinand Building in Roxbury's Dudley Square and is looking for engineers to help demolish and cleanup the site.

The vacant building, constructed in 1899, will be torn down and replaced with a new office building. The facade from the five-story, 33,000 square-foot property will be saved but the remainder of the building cannot be salvaged due to disrepair. The site also includes another eight-story building, known as the Guscott Building, built in 1922 and a vacant lot at the corner of Washington and Warren streets where another four-story building previously stood until it was demolished in 1992. Two of the buildings were acquired for $4.6 million. There was no sale price available for the land, which was sold by the MBTA.

For more than a year the BRA has been negotiating the purchase of both buildings from two local owners.

The buildings have not been occupied for 25 years. Boston officials are working to move city agencies into the Ferdinand Building, located in Dudley Square. The state had also committed to moving the State Department of Public Health to the Ferdinand Building but backed away in the spring of 2004.

The $80 million revitalization project expects to bring about 1,200 jobs to the area, which will have tangible economic impact with average daily spending estimated at $9,000 per day and annual spending estimated at $2.34 million. Existing businesses will benefit from the increased daily spending, spurring local business growth, expansion and revitalization.

The BRA is issuing a request for proposals to demolish, design and develop the site, in two phases. Phase one will seek an engineering and design firm for the demolition and clean up of the site. Phase two will seek an architectural and design firm to propose a design for the construction of the office building.
 
Why does one article say the Ferdinand will be demolished, but the other says it will be renovated?
 
Since the facade is staying I guess it will LOOK like it is being renovated.

They should tear all the buildings down between Warren, Washington, and Dudley St and build a park. Keep the bus shelter and build and underground bus station like at Harvard Sq.
 
The Globe said:
BRA acquires Roxbury's historic Ferdinand Building

September 22, 2006

The Boston Redevelopment Authority said it has acquired a 33,000-square-foot site that includes the historic Ferdinand Building as part of a plan by Mayor Thomas M. Menino to ``restore and reactivate" Dudley Square with an office building for city agencies. The BRA will issue a request for proposals for an engineering consultant team to assist it with demolition and cleanup of the site and an architectural and design team for the construction of the office building. The plan is to demolish most of the old building but incorporate its facade into the new one. In 2004 , Menino pledged to relocate city agencies to the site. The BRA said the $80 million project is expected to bring about 1,200 jobs to the area. The Ferdinand Building was built in 1899 . Also on the site is the Guscott Building , built in 1922 . Plans call for its demolition. The Ferdinand and Guscott buildings are in disrepair and have been unoccupied for more than 25 years , the BRA said. (Chris Reidy)
Link
 
This area was once so urban.

Then they tore down the El.
 
Washington Street was once so urban then they built the EL.
 
Menino wants new police station for Roxbury


Aide says upgrade to help boost area
By Suzanne Smalley, Globe Staff | December 12, 2006

Mayor Thomas M. Menino wants to build a new police station in Dudley Square, part of his drive to revitalize the area.

The Roxbury precinct, the city's busiest police station, is housed in a dilapidated building that is overcrowded and short on parking.

A city official familiar with the mayor's planned remarks to business leaders at a Chamber of Commerce breakfast today said he will highlight his hope that public investment in Dudley Square will spur more private investment.

Community leaders say the planned upgrade is also a necessary improvement for effective policing in Roxbury.

The Roxbury station house, known as B-2 for the police district it covers, is unusually small and run-down.

"B-2 needs a larger and better facility; it's not a very friendly building for folks to come into," said Jorge Martinez, the director of Project RIGHT, a Roxbury nonprofit dedicated to public safety issues. "In West Roxbury you feel like you're walking into a professional office where you're welcome. In B-2 the environment and the building itself lends itself to being unwelcome."

The B-2 station is at 135 Dudley St.; it was unclear yesterday where the mayor plans to build the new station.

The announcement is being made shortly after reports that police response times to 911 calls in Roxbury are slower than in other parts of the city.

Menino's speech will also focus on the low graduation rate from Boston-based community colleges, the official said. The mayor hopes to bolster Roxbury Community College and Bunker Hill Community College programs in subjects such as biotechnology, which is a growth industry in Boston employing a large number of city residents, in an effort to increase employment opportunities for the city's youth.

? Copyright 2006 Globe Newspaper Company.
 
The central police station is just a few blocks away at Roxbury Crossing, so why does Dudley Square need one at all?
 
Because, the police headquarters office is only administrative in nature. It was not designed as an actual station.
 
I think Dudley would benefit far more from commercial development than from another police station. I am concerned, however, about what would happen to the library, which is in the same building as the current police station.
 
Adding a station to the headquarters would be the best solution.
 
The police station is at Ruggles Street a half mile north of Roxbury Crossing and if the old station is the busiest in the city isn't that reason enough to replace it with a more functional building?
 
Last year the city released an RFQ for Dudley. See:

http://www.bostonredevelopmentautho...nitsIndividual.asp?action=ViewInit&InitID=133

from the RFQ:
?The scope of work includes full design services to develop a new, approximately 125,000 ? 175,000 gross square foot municipal office building on the former Ferdinand Building site located at 2262 Washington Street, Roxbury, Massachusetts 02119. The building?s design will incorporate the construction requirements of Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 149, ?? 44A-J, the requirements of the Massachusetts Historical Commission, the requirements of the final building program, and will strive for the highest achievable and economically viable LEED certification (the City?s current minimum certification is LEED Silver). ?

The main program is a large chunk of city services. The corner Ferdinand building [below] will be renovated as part of the project.

ferdinand.jpg



nice take on the bay / display window
ferdinandbay.jpg


I think the status of the process is now unclear due to the collapse of western civilization.
 
The Boston Business Journal covers the abandonment of the project by the city. Not sure the specifics.
 

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