whighlander
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Perhaps -- like Fenway Park -- that will be the Official Innovation District Score / Message Board
Last edited:
http://www.boston.com/business/arti...on_convention_hall_includes_bustling_streets/
Update on grand schemes, ambitious visions, the usual.
More like GRAND TAXPAYER's SCAM. It's easy to have vision when your not using your personal money.
A bit off topic -- by following links out of the above URL -- here's part of the conversion of 'other spaces' to homes in the growing Innovation District
http://www.boston.com/yourtown/bost...to_begin_on_pier_4_apartment_tower_in_boston/
"Waterfront in bloomevelopers are set to begin construction on Pier 4, one of several projects gaining traction
By Casey Ross
Globe Staff / August 11, 2011
After years of delay, the developer of Pier 4 in Boston’s Seaport District will build a $170 million apartment and retail tower, adding to a burst of development activity that is rapidly transforming the city’s waterfront...“We’ve made a significant investment here and see it as a great place to live, work, and visit,’’ said Douglass Karp, the firm’s executive vice president. “This first building is going to be the gateway for the Pier 4 development.’’ …..New England Development and its chief executive, Stephen R. Karp, bought Pier 4 in 1998 ….Karp spent several years devising plans for a massive commercial development on Pier 4 that won approval in 2005......His firm waited to proceed through the recession and just recently began meeting with city officials about moving forward......Before construction can proceed, the Boston Redevelopment Authority must sign off on changes to the development plan. The building New England Development now wants to contain apartments had been previously slated for offices......BRA officials have thus far offered supportive comments for the project, which they see as crucial to continuing momentum on the waterfront at a time when it seems poised for rapid redevelopment......“What’s different now is that the innovation district is a growing place,’’ BRA director Peter Meade said."
The final report:
http://www.t5boston.com/pdf/CP_Final_711.pdf
(Scroll down about 2/3 way for some interesting renderings of potential development...)
Guess who is pushing pressure on the development. It just happens to be the Land owner "Developers John Drew and Stephen Karp who are considering building multiple hotels on the South Boston Waterfront, though much depends on the fate of a proposed Boston Convention and Exhibition Center expansion." http://www.bankerandtradesman.com/
Cronyism and self-serving cheerleading of public projects on the Seaport is not new. It was going on with CAT/Tunnel, BCEC and also failed proposals such as the Megaplex.
Consider:
http://www.seaportalliance.org/SAND/Archive/020801massport.html
And another "jump start" article in 2009.
http://www.seaportalliance.org/SAND/Archive/091201bcec.html
There have been scores of articles about jump starting the Seaport with "Just One More Public Project" with no examination of private sector benchmarks. IMO, the Boston Chamber of Commerce and NAIOP focus an inordinate amount of advocacy on how to stimulate public projects rather than promoting private sector investment.
All said, I think you should back off on the angry screeds and personal attacks. For example, Menino has little to do with the BCEC expansion plan, and has not been pounding the pavement to push it forward. I wouldn't care what you do, but I think you make good points and then ruin them by flaming Menino, Shen, etc. What good does that do?
Cronyism and self-serving cheerleading of public projects on the Seaport is not new. It was going on with CAT/Tunnel, BCEC and also failed proposals such as the Megaplex.....There have been scores of articles about jump starting the Seaport with "Just One More Public Project" with no examination of private sector benchmarks. ?
Scil & Riff, etc ....
Sure the Seaport Innovation District development looks like an elephant's pregnancy -- but things around here just take time -- sometime a lot of time -- often with several false starts and never-were-to-be's (e.g. Magaplex; Rt-128 plans for which dated from the 1920's; Big Dig; various T extensions planned in the 1960's and still TBD).
My best though imperfect model is the evolution of MIT's badkyard -- aka Kendall Sq.
When I was an undergrad at MIT in the early 1970's -- there was serious talk of either building a new Cambridge City Hall complex or low income housing on the land which has become Cambridge Center
MIT had built Tech Square in the 1960's and was planning more of the same -- but some folks in Cambridge wanted the nearly vacant land (which had been cleared for the ill-fted NASA Electronics Reserch Center in the early 1960's) returned to Blue Collar manufacturing, or if not that then at least housing for never to be again blue collar workers
Luckily time passed and the evoloution of Kendall Sq. was delayed sufficiently that AI alley came and went and along came Whitehead Instiute and the rest is history -- just 30 years late
I'm guessing that 30 years from now (perhaps less) that a lot of the potential of the Seaport / Innovation District will be realized -- However, not necessarily the way that the planners currently envision it
Just the past 5 years has changed the landscape in that area in a remarkable fashion.
Whighlander, That is a tough comparison the evolution of Kendall Square vs Seaport District.
In the 70's and 80's were very tough times for America. I felt Cambridge was a very different place back then.
I'm not sure what the political & zoning issues or laws comparing both the city of Cambridge to the city of Boston are...... I just don't see the city of Cambridge doing things like the city of Boston does. I also think Harvard and MIT make all the rules.
The Seaport District will be a commercially developed area with really no character to attract REAL FOOT TRAFFIC unless prices become more economically affordable for the majority of Masses. This will not be a destination spot for Boston.
I think they missed too many opportunities (AKA Kraft or Fenway park) and waited too long for this area to be developed.
Not to say the developers won’t make their money. The Seaport development just won’t be anything that would make a tourist or anybody else go out of their way to see, if they didn’t have to.