fattony
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This is literally 500 or fewer feet from a Green Line station. Does this project really need 323 parking spaces for 270 units, even with the supermarket?
So, I live near here and frequent the current Whole Foods at this location...it absolutely astounds me how many people choose to drive to do their shopping here. The present surface lot is almost always full (or at least 2/3 full), and there are frequent traffic jams of people trying to get in/out of the lot...but, to boot, this is a pedestrian-heavy area, with lots of people doing their shopping on foot...and so the parking lot is just a train wreck of pedestrian-vs-car. I honestly don't know what to say about why this is what it is here...
Separate thought: this project is definitely big enough to deserve it's own thread.
I don't think it is enough to say "this site is 500 feet from a GL stop." I probably don't know this area as well as you, but I've been there a number of times. A lot of people in Brighton and Brookline have cars, even if they don't drive it to work/school daily. I dare say most people in the area have cars.
Would you agree that transit in this area is "commuting-oriented" and while it sits right between two transit lines, it isn't a place with a strong transit network?
I think that is a distinction between an area like Brighton compared to say Central or Harvard Square. While those squares also sit pretty far out on a spoke of our hub-an-spoke rail network, they are heavily serviced by buses in all directions as well. That makes more trips possible/desirable without a car and people who don't own or don't want to use their car much may gravitate there. I don't mean 100% of everybody, but let's say more than half.
By contrast, aside from the 65 bus this area of Brighton/Brookline is served only by radial transit leading downtown. That may contribute to more of a bedroom community feel and is perhaps more likely to attract folks who are eager for a transit ride downtown, but are quick to hop in the car for any other trip. Again, that doesn't mean 100%, but likely more than half.
The people in each area who are in the sizable minority probably feel a lot of tension. For you, that is being a pedestrian/transit-oriented person in an area that has a fair % of car users. It really irks you that WF has so much parking. Your counterpoint is someone who is inclined to jump in the car all the time, but lives in Central (or maybe say Inman) and is irked that WF has so little parking.
I think transit networks contribute much more to encouraging car-free/car-light behavior patterns than radial lines alone. Population density is important too, but this area clearly has the density. I think a transit network may be the secret sauce that makes the difference between what feels like an strongly urban, inner-neighborhood and a transitional outer-neighborhood.
I'll conclude by saying that adding this much parking is a big mistake. It is just feeding the beast. One effective tool the city can do to discourage overuse of cars is to make it miserable to use cars. Over time, the people who don't mind living car-light or car-free will gravitate to the area and displace the dissatisfied car-addicted folks.