BostonObserver
Active Member
- Joined
- Dec 26, 2006
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What’s up with the Midtown Motor Inn replacement?
2021:^Ha, I totally forgot about this. Wasn't this floated around a few years ago?
Yes, you are correct (on both counts, sadly; I'm pushing 50, so I'm hoping maybe in my child's lifetime?).I'm pretty sure the CLF lawsuit that threw out the Harbor Plan and stopped the Aquarium Garage tower in its tracks affected this one too. I'll be surprised if anything ever gets built here in most of our lifetimes.
During the quarter, we closed on assets totaling $17.2 million inclusive of 99 A Street in the Seaport, which executive management deemed to no longer be strategic due to its one off profile and our pivot to 285, 299, 307, 347 Dorchester Avenue acquired during the quarter, which is nearby with similar red line access, but has the scale to be a future mega campus.
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I wanted to ask about these three parcels on cambridge street. They both had buildings demolished in the last five years with nothing to replace them. Anyone have info on what happened?
Editing as I figure it out:
Image 1: Apparently used as construction staging for millers river apartments? Not sure why. It's currently a grass lot.
Image 2: ??
Image 3: 851 cambridge st burned down in 2019 link
I think most harvard projects end up in the enterprise research campus thread. From what you said it looks like this one will near the square? That's cool.I don't see a general Harvard University projects page on here. I was scrolling through the Harvard Town Gown report from 2023. There's a new $100M building by Grafton Architects with Perry Dean Rodgers as the Executive Architect. It is around 100K square feet, near the existing Littauer Center. Based on the area of usable square footage there, at a conservative level, you can likely expect at least 3-4 stories. This project's been pretty quiet, but a groundbreaking for some early enabling work should be starting in the coming months ("Fall 2024"), so we should be expecting some design documents being posted somewhere sometime soon, I'd presume. That, or at least some renderings from a press-release. I'm interested to see what Harvard's architecture for new-construction on their "main campus" (not Allston) looks like. Grafton Architects has a pretty distinct look, and they use a lot of brick (and seemingly, stairs). Should be interesting.
It will be on the Cambridge campus, across from Cambridge Commons, so not-so-close to Harvard Square, but still should be interesting.I think most harvard projects end up in the enterprise research campus thread. From what you said it looks like this one will near the square? That's cool.
i'd like to know the same. i'm guessing this design is contingent on this project finishing first: https://archboston.com/community/threads/north-station-charles-river-draw-tower-a.5333/page-12What's going on with the South Bank Bridge project? The last update I can find was from 2019 and predicted construction complete in 2022.
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An update on this: some time after this post, I walked by the site, and they had all the utilities and comms painted out. At least for a week now, the site has been fenced off, so I believe an early release package for site/utilities work has been initiated. I still don't see much new info online about this.I don't see a general Harvard University projects page on here. I was scrolling through the Harvard Town Gown report from 2023. There's a new $100M building by Grafton Architects with Perry Dean Rodgers as the Executive Architect. It is around 100K square feet, near the existing Littauer Center. Based on the area of usable square footage there, at a conservative level, you can likely expect at least 3-4 stories. This project's been pretty quiet, but a groundbreaking for some early enabling work should be starting in the coming months ("Fall 2024"), so we should be expecting some design documents being posted somewhere sometime soon, I'd presume. That, or at least some renderings from a press-release. I'm interested to see what Harvard's architecture for new-construction on their "main campus" (not Allston) looks like. Grafton Architects has a pretty distinct look, and they use a lot of brick (and seemingly, stairs). Should be interesting.