odurandina
Senior Member
- Joined
- Dec 1, 2015
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bulldoze Allston and put up 200 6-story brownstones.
That's the type of development Brighton needs more of.
Still plans for 215 parking spaces, which makes me wonder where they're going to put such an enormous amount of parking. Can't be good.
Brown has a big parking lot facing Gardner Street where his employees park. If he wants to build employee parking in this project, I guess that means he wants to redevelop the Gardner Street lot?
Around here would be a good place for micro units, w/o stainless steal appliances and granite counter tops. Maybe those could truly be affordable.
w/o = without.
i always thought that 3-4 bdrm/ no redundancy kitchen/dining, bath in Fens, South End, and Newbury St area brownstones work well for students and young workers. IS building micro units be following a trend on campus'? Is there such a trend at the schools?
Indeed, spartan/basic micro-units without the bling. Please fill Alst/Brighton with these.
But, please make these developments not just mix-income, but also mix rentals and condos. That's how you build a mid.-class community; Alst/Bright is already home to thousands of 22-yr-old transients. Let's plant some ownership roots around the transients so people actually care about the building maintenance, trash in the street, etc.
Fwiw, nice appliances and countertops aren't what make apartments expensive. The difference between an ugly kitchen and a nice one is a couple grand. That's a drop in the bucket compared to land and construction costs. The stainless/granite finishes are a red herring. The important part for affordability is to maximize leasable square footage, which is what doormen and half-assed gyms waste. Obviously the easiest way to add to leasable area is to build up.
Local locksmith acquires 7,966 square foot Allston parcel for $1.8 million: http://www.bldup.com/projects/445-cambridge-street