Healthpeak Cambridge Point | Alewife Quadrangle | West Cambridge

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Developer proposes 46-acre project in Cambridge that would include 2,076 apartments and millions of square feet of new lab and office space​

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“Healthpeak, a Denver company that normally focuses on healthcare development(link is external), has filed plans with the state for a $4.5-billion project north of Fresh Pond in Cambridge that would create a new apartment neighborhood, plenty of labs and offices for its residents to work in and a pedestrian/bicycle bridge over the MBTA commuter-rail tracks to Alewife station.

As first reported by Banker & Tradesman(link is external), the proposed 46-acre development, with 4.6 million total square feet of residential and lab/office/retail space, would include roughly 14 acres of "publicly accessible plazas, open spaces, and pocket parks," with another 1.24 acres given to Cambridge for construction of a new public-works garage, according to its filings with the state Environmental Policy Act office(link is external).

The plans also include parking spaces for 4,773 cars - up from the 1,481 spaces that now serve the area's smaller office and industrial buildings. The various buildings would have space to store 2,845 bicycles, with outdoor racks for another 417 bikes.

The filings do not specify the number of floors in proposed buildings - but says the tallest would be 160 feet - or how many of the apartments would be income restricted…..”


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Healthpeak and Hines Announce a Strategic Partnership on the Cambridge Point Mixed-Use Development in Cambridge, Massachusetts​

“Healthpeak Properties, Inc. (NYSE: DOC), a leading owner, operator, and developer of real estate for healthcare discovery and delivery, and Hines, a global real estate investment manager, announced today a long-term partnership to develop the residential components of Healthpeak’s Cambridge Point master-planned district in the Alewife neighborhood of Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Hines will lead the residential development in coordination with Healthpeak as master developer. Hines, with its partners, will capitalize the residential developments and intends to commence construction on the first residential building within the first 12 months following receipt of entitlements, which is anticipated in the second half of 2026

Situated adjacent to the MBTA Rapid Transit Rail Station in the Alewife neighborhood, Cambridge Point is a 40-acre master plan that has total development potential of up to five million square feet. The project is anticipated to include multifamily residential units, research and lab space, and community-oriented ground-floor neighborhood retail uses. The pedestrian-oriented district will be defined by a highly walkable retail corridor, an extensive green open space network connecting Fresh Pond and Alewife Brook Reservation, and publicly beneficial infrastructure, including a pedestrian bridge to connect the community directly to the MBTA red line with a short ride to Kendall Square and South Station.……”


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UHub's coverage: https://www.universalhub.com/2025/developer-proposes-46-acre-project-cambridge-would-include-2076

Not thrilled about bringing 4,000+ parking spaces to the area, but I imagine they probably envision a fairly high drive modeshare for the office/lab given that the regional transit connectivity there, even with a footbridge to Alewife, is not great.

Always great to see more housing, though as some UHub commenters point out, this area is home to some of the last remaining small-scale industrial in Cambridge, which would be a shame to lose. That said, it all feels a bit like a no-man's land now, so a more cohesive vision/street grid would be nice.
 

Healthpeak’s Alewife Redevelopment Plans 10-Year Buildout in Two Phases​

Healthpeak’s major redevelopment proposal for the Alewife area in Cambridge is expected to unfold over a 10-year timeline and will be executed in two primary phases, with construction slated to begin within 12 months of anticipated approvals in Q3 2026. Phase one of the project will include approximately 1.3 million square feet of office and lab space across four buildings and around 1.1 million square feet of residential use—approximately 1,300 units—in five buildings. The phase will also introduce nearly 3,000 structured parking spaces, 19,000 square feet of neighborhood-focused ground-floor uses, and over 7.5 acres of publicly accessible open space. Additionally, 1.24 acres will be transferred to the City of Cambridge for a Department of Public Works Yard Project, and the development will include new and enhanced rights-of-way.



The second phase will deliver another 1.2 million square feet of office/lab space in four buildings and 650,000 square feet of residential use—approximately 774 units—in two buildings. This phase will add 1,751 parking spaces, a minimum of 57,000 square feet of neighborhood-serving uses, and 6.6 more acres of open space. A new off-site pedestrian and bicycle bridge is also planned. Across both phases, the project will provide approximately 14 acres of public plazas, parks, and open spaces designed to prioritize sustainability, comfort, and community connectivity in accordance with Alewife Urban Design Guideline principles………”

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Reposting @bigpicture7 's post from the Alewife infill thread :)
This is massive, and I am sure we've discussed it in bits and pieces here or there, but I couldn't tell if anyone started a dedicated thread for it?

As of today, Cambridge just created a 'Special Permits' page for it.

PB-410 - Alewife Quadrangle

And the first presentation was just posted:

View attachment 70685
^From posted presentation @ https://www.cambridgema.gov/-/media...isory/sp410/sp410_preapplication_20260224.pdf

If anyone is sure we don't already have a page for this, please feel free to create one! Or, if we do have one, please re-post this there.
 
Moved my post as well

This is massive, and I am sure we've discussed it in bits and pieces here or there, but I couldn't tell if anyone started a dedicated thread for it?

As of today, Cambridge just created a 'Special Permits' page for it.

PB-410 - Alewife Quadrangle

And the first presentation was just posted:

View attachment 70685
^From posted presentation @ https://www.cambridgema.gov/-/media...isory/sp410/sp410_preapplication_20260224.pdf

If anyone is sure we don't already have a page for this, please feel free to create one! Or, if we do have one, please re-post this there.
This is gonna be a decent little neighborhood with good transit access once its built out.

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They all look good ^, but I didn't see shown the pedestrian overpass over the Fitchburg Division in the first plan-view rendering. That's absolutely essential for foot and bicycle access to Alewife station.
Here's a link to the presentation the developers just made. They're just slides, so not a ton of detail, but they do show plans for a bike/pedestrian bridge over the tracks on pages 12 and 15.

But I agree, that's super important. That should really be done first, before anything else even opens.

 
Here's a link to the presentation the developers just made. They're just slides, so not a ton of detail, but they do show plans for a bike/pedestrian bridge over the tracks on pages 12 and 15.

But I agree, that's super important. That should really be done first, before anything else even opens.

City's still fucking-the-chicken on trying to get the private devs to pay for the footbridge. They've been dangling that for years, but the market's long since spoken...no interested takers, so it's at square-one same as it ever was. Showing the possible cross-track connections as formless directional arrows buried deep in the slide deck without presenting any concrete plan to make it a reality...or provide any material support or stepped-up effort for making it a reality...is sadly no change from their tactics of 15 years ago that got it nowhere fast. :(

Completely agreed. Without the connection, the "transit orientation" of all that impressive-looking new massing is going to continue to be an afterthought and all those densely-packed buildings are going to have to have the same ground-floor and below-ground garages at same insane parking ratios as the rest of the neighborhood. It's >3/4 mile walk on Concord Ave. + the shitty Parkway sidewalk to reach the RL station that's 1500 ft. away straight across the tracks + the Cambridgepark sidewalk. All they've got is the same old very irregular-frequency 74/78 buses to Harvard-not-Alewife for any better transit connection than the current walk. There'll be zero mode shift without the bridge.
 
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City's still fucking-the-chicken on trying to get the private devs to pay for the footbridge. They've been dangling that for years, but the market's long since spoken...no interested takers,
These developers do look like interested takers.
They filed documents with state environmental agencies last year. They are very, very explicit that they are building a bridge over the tracks. From quick look, that's in the master plan. Also, dealing with the MBTA for that construction is in their List of Anticipated Permits and Approvals. There are also renderings of their proposed bridge in their original plans from a couple of years ago, pages 28-29.

This isn't just "formless directional arrows buried deep in the slide deck without presenting any concrete plan to make it a reality." They have plans, and are taking steps consistent with what you'd expect them to do to actually build the bridge. I don't know this company. Maybe they try to weasel out. Maybe Cambridge has to really pressure them to get it done. But it really doesn't look like we're back to square-one. It looks like there is some momentum for these developers to actually build the bridge.
 
These developers do look like interested takers.
They filed documents with state environmental agencies last year. They are very, very explicit that they are building a bridge over the tracks. From quick look, that's in the master plan. Also, dealing with the MBTA for that construction is in their List of Anticipated Permits and Approvals. There are also renderings of their proposed bridge in their original plans from a couple of years ago, pages 28-29.

This isn't just "formless directional arrows buried deep in the slide deck without presenting any concrete plan to make it a reality." They have plans, and are taking steps consistent with what you'd expect them to do to actually build the bridge. I don't know this company. Maybe they try to weasel out. Maybe Cambridge has to really pressure them to get it done. But it really doesn't look like we're back to square-one. It looks like there is some momentum for these developers to actually build the bridge.
Thats a pretty cool design solution for giving pedestrians as short a path to walk as possible, while still allowing bikers to cross, and keeping it all in a small footprint. Looks kind of like a bowtie.













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Healthpeak looks to move forward with “transformative” project​

$4.5 billion project aims to change the Quadrangle area in Alewife.

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“Plans for a mixed-use development to “transform” Alewife’s Quadrangle moved toward a special permit application next month at a virtual Planning Board meeting Tuesday night, as a project team for Denver-based Healthpeak Properties presented updated plans for a $4.5 billion, 4.6 million square foot project.

“It’s very surreal to finally be here in front of the planning board after such a long journey,” said Healthpeak’s Rylan Squirrel. The development has been in the planning process for years, alongside major rezoning allowing greater density and height in the area.

Eventually, it promises to connect this part of Alewife more closely with the surrounding neighborhoods, with integrated commercial and residential buildings, a bridge to Alewife station, and open spaces on over 40 acres of West Cambridge. Developers now face increased costs and a deflated market for laboratory space as the project moves forward.

Now, the project faces a vastly different economic landscape from when Healthpeak first acquired the properties. “Everything made financial sense,” Squirrel said of the early plans. “Nowadays, with increased interest rates, inflated construction costs, and regulatory uncertainty, we are met with some very serious challenges, not just for the life science development, but also the residential development itself.”……..”


 
From the
Huge documentation drop just posted to the special permits site:


...in advance of an April 28 review meeting
In the documents, I found the following verbiage that supports the new ped/bike bridge over the tracks. It wasn't clear who will be paying for it, but hopefully the developer will be:

"As further described in Volume II, Section1.6.1, an essential element of the Project is the construction of a Proposed Bridge, a new pedestrian and bicycle connection over the MBTA commuter rail tracks that will provide a long-awaited connection between the Quad and the Alewife Triangle/Alewife MBTA train station to the north. The final design of the Proposed Bridge is subject to approval by the MBTA and local agencies with jurisdiction. Under the existing conditions, most of the Quad, particularly sites located west of Wheeler Street, experience a walk time from the Quad to the Alewife MBTA Station of approximately 15-20 minutes (3/4 mile to1 mile). With the Proposed Bridge in place, most of the Quad would experience a walk time from the Quad to the Alewife MBTA train station of about 8-15 minutes on average (1/2mile to 3/4 mile). It is anticipated that the Proposed Bridge would result in a savings of approximately 5-7 minutes, depending on where in the Quad the pedestrian originates their trip."
 
15-20 minutes seems a little quick for the inner Healthpeak property. The substation blocks easy cut through from that property, so you need to head down to the donuts and back up over the tracks.
 

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