web site: http://800huntington.com/
from 12/29/08 Boston Herald
http://www.bostonherald.com/busines...iew.bg?articleid=1141771&srvc=home&position=1
from 12/29/08 Boston Herald
Mission Hill residents have landed a key ally in their battle to prevent a developer from building a bio-lab in their neighborhood: Boston Mayor Thomas M. Menino.
The Beal Co.?s plans to raze the Immune Disease Institute, a two-story concrete landmark at 800 Huntington Ave., and replace it with a five-story facility has faced strong opposition from neighbors who fear expansion of the Longwood Medical Area.
?This new building would encroach on a residential area,? said Menino. ?The way it?s designed overshadows housing behind it and extends the Longwood Medical Area. Unless they change plans, this idea isn?t going anywhere.?
Peter B. Nichols, Beal?s senior vice president, could not be reached for comment. In June, he presented the redevelopment plan to nearly 500 residents.
Beal?s Web site, 800Huntington.com, says the firm wants to ?redevelop and reinvest in an obsolete facility; enliven the street with a multi-use building and improved housing, creating activity and vibrancy along Huntington Avenue.?
But so far the response from the neighborhood has been negative.
?We are excited that Beal is considering a new development in that location, but what they want is not something the community wants,? said City Councilor Michael Ross, a Mission Hill resident. ?We?ve encouraged the developer to come back with something viable.?
State Rep. Jeffrey Sanchez, a Boston Democrat, said there is widespread suspicion of any commercial project on Mission Hill.
?People are very passionate about maintaining the residential integrity of this neighborhood,? he said. ?There are lots of folks here who experienced the growth of the institutions into Mission Hill and they want the Longwood Medical Area to stay on the other side of Huntington Ave.?
http://www.bostonherald.com/busines...iew.bg?articleid=1141771&srvc=home&position=1