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  1. C

    75 Morrissey Boulevard | Dorchester

    Great lesson in where to and not to put parks. Under the "75 Morrissey" is the well located "Community Park". The family park looks like fumes park.
  2. C

    Roxbury Infill and Small Developments

    These articles are silly until the City allows black developers to build infill and towers near Nubian (they resist it tooth and claw) and until they allow market rate housing there in volume, which is needed to have residents who can spend there
  3. C

    Allston-Brighton Infill and Small Developments

    It's rather strange how all these Allston side street projects go up, but the ones on Cambridge and Harvard Streets barely move (the above being the rare exception)
  4. C

    Mission Hill Infill and Small Developments

    lolololol also we don't need another community garden next to a community garden. just build homes!
  5. C

    Shreve, Crump & Low Redevelopment | 334-364 Boylston Street | Back Bay

    When it was wet today, it looked much better for precisely this reason.
  6. C

    Shreve, Crump & Low Redevelopment | 334-364 Boylston Street | Back Bay

    Even if you don't like it, the materials quality is high, it looks way better than the photos, and comparison to the WHOOP building is moronic. I work 2 blocks away and see it every day. It's nice!
  7. C

    Lab/Office | 109 Brookline Avenue | Fenway

    There's also a medical office building that looks tallish, but is half parking. Some weird stuff on those blocks.
  8. C

    Back Bay Infill and Small Developments

    What's the story behind this last one? I used to live nearby and never understood what was up there.
  9. C

    Bartlett Yards | 2505-2565 Washington Street | Roxbury

    Expected completion of the whole thing....2040?
  10. C

    Dorchester Bay City (nee Bayside Expo Ctr.) | Columbia Point

    "engaging other groups" aka paying bribes to neighborhood associations of nimbys no one should listen to? It's not even clear that the payoffs are going to legitimately organized nonprofits --- but if you're a group of local nimbys, the city of Boston will let you get your pound of flesh no...
  11. C

    50 Herald Street | Chinatown / South End

    There's absolutely no reason that CCBA couldn't add moderately priced units, essentially those affordable at 100% and 120% of AMI to this project, rather than cutting 60+% of the housing. In fact, affordable housing subsidy programs usually only require 60% of the building be affordable; this...
  12. C

    Drexel Village | 175 Ruggles Street | Roxbury

    I'm not sure about that. The status of the land around Melnea Cass is *very* weird and there's been multiple proposals to put in better walking, biking, and bus lanes.
  13. C

    50 Herald Street | Chinatown / South End

    The CCBA is directly responsible for making chinatown unaffordable between this and tai tung ph2
  14. C

    50 Herald Street | Chinatown / South End

    Do we know why this was cut down so much? What's the point? Making it 100% affordable?
  15. C

    Drexel Village | 175 Ruggles Street | Roxbury

    Yeah, but that side of Melnea is ruined all the way to Washington St with a precedent of random trees screening housing heavily set back. Poor design choice, may get fixed in the future.
  16. C

    Dorchester Infill and Small Developments

    Making south bay architecturally interesting!
  17. C

    L Street Station Redevelopment (née Old Edison Plant)| 776 Summer Street | South Boston

    Right and their small mindedness got them a worse project by their own metrics!
  18. C

    L Street Station Redevelopment (née Old Edison Plant)| 776 Summer Street | South Boston

    This project was designed to have far more residential. The "local community" opposed it on traffic concerns, bizarrely favoring office, despite local residential being far less likely to induce traffic and car commutes...
  19. C

    Roxbury Infill and Small Developments

    RCC is landbanking them according to my friend who was in leadership there. It's a travesty
  20. C

    75 Morrissey Boulevard | Dorchester

    I thought these high strength filters were pretty standard in nice new construction buildings.

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