Different approach for North End project
By Scott Van Voorhis
Boston Herald Business Reporter
Wednesday, April 18, 2007
A controversial North End waterfront development proposal is getting an extreme makeover.
Developer Byron Gilchrest has scrapped plans to build a condo high-rise on Commercial Street along the North End?s harborfront, after complaints that it looked like a glass and steel ?wall? along the water.
Instead, Gilchrest has unveiled a new proposal that features red brick on most of its facade and is meant to fit in better with surrounding architecture. The design takes a page from what is arguably the Hub?s most distinctive waterfront project - Rowes Wharf.
In another step, Gilchrest is exploring the shift of the project site - at a cost of at least $2 million - to neighboring, state-owned tennis courts.
He would then rebuild the courts on the site where he had initially proposed building, a former furniture store at 585 Commercial St.
The shift would create a contiguous block of state-owned recreation land along the waterfront.
?I started off with something that was very high-style, New York, Miami,? said Gilchrest, an MIT-trained architect who has helped develop a number of upscale Boston condo projects.
?It?s more Rowes Wharfy,? Gilchrest said.
Gilchrest?s dramatic shift comes in the face of neighborhood concern over his plans, which would exceed a 55-foot height limit aimed at protecting the North End?s historic character.
Gilchrest contends he can?t make the numbers work within that envelope. He added that a number of buildings already exceed that limit.
The new design shows a project varying in height from 55 feet on one end to 95 feet at its peak.
The redesign also comes amid a growing backlash against a profusion of New York-style condo high-rises in Boston.
His previous proposal, Gilchrest acknowledges, looked similar to the InterContinental on Atlantic Ave., wrapped in a blue-tinted glass wall. The new design takes its inspiration from his favorite local architectural gems.
They include not just Rowes Wharf, but also One Charles, Heritage on the Garden and the South End?s Atelier 505.
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