This much is clear.
No need to take a personal cheap shot. I'm trying to take the high road, but if I were you, I'd stay away from using the word "clear".
This much is clear.
Trying to take the high road, but if I were you, I'd stay away from using the word "clear".
Done.I put it in all caps in the prior message. By the way you take plenty of cheap shots. In this case you didn't respond to anything I said and instead took shots at my preferences, which have nothing to do with what I wrote in this thread. I see you do it in other threads too. No high roads here.
Thanks for sharing, this looks like a great project!Sidestepping whatever's happening up there, I'm going to consider renovations as infill, and it looks like another one just hit the BPDA! Link and some screenshots below. 85 Devonshire will combine 3 buildings and create 95 rental units. Would love more condos downtown, but units are units and I'm glad the incentives are causing some movement (we'll see if it's progress).
Units are pretty small, averaging 640sf. Cost of the conversion is $36,000,000 (~$380,000 per unit)
85 Devonshire Street | Bostonplans.org
Development Projects and Planned Development Areas (PDAs) that the Development Review division is coordinating.www.bostonplans.org
This looks really good. These buildings have had a few proposals over the years, so I'm hopeful this actually happens.Sidestepping whatever's happening up there, I'm going to consider renovations as infill, and it looks like another one just hit the BPDA! Link and some screenshots below. 85 Devonshire will combine 3 buildings and create 95 rental units. Would love more condos downtown, but units are units and I'm glad the incentives are causing some movement (we'll see if it's progress).
Units are pretty small, averaging 640sf. Cost of the conversion is $36,000,000 (~$380,000 per unit)
85 Devonshire Street | Bostonplans.org
Development Projects and Planned Development Areas (PDAs) that the Development Review division is coordinating.www.bostonplans.org
View attachment 47820
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281 Franklin is another recently proposed conversion.
“The proposed project at 281 Franklin Street is part of the BPDA's Office to Residential Conversion Program. The project proposes the renovation and change in use for the existing 11,119 sq ft mixed-use building from Ground-Floor Restaurant and Offices above to Ground-Floor Restaurant and 15 residential apartment units above. Including 10 studio units and 5 one-bedroom units. With 3 IDP units (20% of proposed units).”
https://www.bostonplans.org/projects/development-projects/281-franklin-street
Dispensaries aren’t bars. There isn’t space to consume on the premises and it’s against the law to do so, at least for now. They’re much more similar to liquor stores that close early. Since people live above bars and restaurants all over the city, I’m curious what the drawback would be for a dispensary.Agree the Devonshire project looks great…I wonder how people would feel living above a dispensary though ?
There are at least two in Eastie that are on the ground floor of buildings with residential units above. Berkshire Roots and BOUTIQ. I’m sure there are more.Just unusual I guess…this may be the first dispensary in a residential building in the state?