East Boston Infill and Small Developments

^ Sadly destroyed. The building was allegedly unstable and the city encouraged its demolition. Should have been an adaptive reuse project.
 
^ Sadly destroyed. The building was allegedly unstable and the city encouraged its demolition. Should have been an adaptive reuse project.

That sucks... they should've kept the arch like they did here (actually it probably would have been corny, maybe cool though).

I thought I'd tooled around here recently and was surprised on the streetview since I wouldve remembered a cool structure and sign like that.
 
11/17/16 - BPDA Board Meeting:

Board approves 64 residential units for 301-303 Border Street in #EastBoston http://ow.ly/zSxt306hKSF

https://twitter.com/BostonPlans/status/799376875856359425

Cxf1Am5XAAEL4nY.jpg:large

This was approved by the ZBA last night, much to the neighborhood's discontent who want parking galore & less units, per usual. This is a remarkably dense approval for Eastie and hopefully symbolizes a new direction in Eastie.

It works out to 64 units per half acre & 0.66 parking spaces per unit.

http://www.universalhub.com/2016/condo-building-border-street-east-boston-wins
 
^I think Jeff was thinking of Jeffries Point/Maverick. Basically no airplane noise there (though that area is gentrifying).

Yes, I was more thinking of the downtown facing waterfront areas, that have been really slow to develop, Jeffries Point/Maverick.
 
I think Google needs to update its address locations in its pictures.

It is showing the old former factory building at 6 New Street. As we all know, the old building has since been removed and a new building was put there.

How often do they update street locations? Not very often, it seems. :confused:
 
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It works out to 64 units per half acre & 0.66 parking spaces per unit.

http://www.universalhub.com/2016/condo-building-border-street-east-boston-wins

From Ari's napkin math in the comment section, this is almost looking affordable:

That's $337k/unit. So while not cheap, it's probably on the order of $450k-$350-$250 for 3-2-1 bedrooms. On frequent bus lines, reasonably close to the Blue Line, and without an overage of parking. Of course, we probably need this 1000 times over in the region to make a dent in the housing crisis.
 
Today in how to make money in real estate: Paul Roiff & Heath Properties have apparently sold the building at 151-155 Porter St (175 Orleans Street) for $14.75 million. Project was approved by BPDA last year.

Roiff bought it in 2013 for $2.5 million.

From BPDA: 183 Orleans LLC proposes the rehabilitation of the historic structure at 175 Orleans Street, into a 127-room loft style boutique hotel, Loftel Boston. The rehabilitation will also include one additional stories and 65 at grade parking spaces.

New boutique hotel, 151 Porter St:

edit - deleted failed images, thx data ill try again next time
 

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