I'll push back on this. Notice that three year gap? That's NU reconsidering the project and coming in with a different one. This is a developer financed project and this is clearly a VE exercise. They've taken all of the classroom space out, rationalized the floor plates as much as possible, and simplified the facade design. It looks like the only things the BCDC asked for was some ground floor activation, emphasis on that Melnea Cass/Tremont corner, and a minor massing shift.I'm sure that's a big part of it but they described a lot of the changes as appeasing the BCDC specifically in this iteration: https://bpda.app.box.com/s/wt26ssqye8pzds1div1f4e2i1yty81ox
You can kind of follow the design progression by going through all the BCDC presentations and I'm just impressed we ended up with something so uninspired after at least 5 civic design reviews. And NU has shown with EXP/ISEC that they're at least sometimes willing to pay for bespoke design...
March 2024: https://bpda.box.com/v/20240305-840COLUMBUSAVE
Feb 2024: missing file
January 2024: https://bpda.app.box.com/s/er1jyzll5gj0vy43k3o0oupkws03kfek
2021: https://bpda.box.com/s/wt26ssqye8pzds1div1f4e2i1yty81ox
2020: https://bpda.app.box.com/s/v9v1u30d9tsmymvefejljsdh1djk3mrr
The three year gap was due to the city jerking them around over some neighborhood land title issues conflating with hyperlocal NIMBYism.I'll push back on this. Notice that three year gap? That's NU reconsidering the project and coming in with a different one. This is a developer financed project and this is clearly a VE exercise. They've taken all of the classroom space out, rationalized the floor plates as much as possible, and simplified the facade design. It looks like the only things the BCDC asked for was some ground floor activation, emphasis on that Melnea Cass/Tremont corner, and a minor massing shift.
While design review isn't always great it also isn't always bad. And it this case, barely touched the revised proposal NU submitted.
Yeah it didn't get posted in here but the case involving this land made it all the way to the MA Supreme Court in February who ruled in favor of Northeastern: https://caselaw.findlaw.com/court/ma-supreme-judicial-court/115886868.htmlThe three year gap was due to the city jerking them around over some neighborhood land title issues conflating with hyperlocal NIMBYism.
And some people wonder why it is so difficult to build in parts of Boston....and so expensive.Yeah it didn't get posted in here but the case involving this land made it all the way to the MA Supreme Court in February who ruled in favor of Northeastern: https://caselaw.findlaw.com/court/ma-supreme-judicial-court/115886868.html
They also ruled in favor of Northeastern when the same group sued after International Village was built in 2016: https://casetext.com/case/columbia-plaza-associates-v-northeastern-university
Didn't realize the parcels had quite that much history really
Lightview and the 840 Columbus buildings are/will be owned by ACC, not Northeastern. Although both are built on land that Northeastern owns and will continue to own. That gives the university some control of the use of the buildings.I was on a jog by here on Sunday and went by Lightview and it became a thought that perhaps Northeastern has the investment interest in these tall/dense residential projects between 20 and 30 stories and they don't seem to be slowing, with a growing enrollment and money coming in the door.
Is this part of the city, when considering Boston proper, probably posed to have some of the most pushed mid-rises, maybe along with the Fort Point channel area? I can't see many other areas moving along aith anything but infill very quickly
It fits the slow extension of the high spine along Huntington...I was on a jog by here on Sunday and went by Lightview and it became a thought that perhaps Northeastern has the investment interest in these tall/dense residential projects between 20 and 30 stories and they don't seem to be slowing, with a growing enrollment and money coming in the door.
Is this part of the city, when considering Boston proper, probably posed to have some of the most pushed mid-rises, maybe along with the Fort Point channel area? I can't see many other areas moving along aith anything but infill very quickly