Cambridge Infill and Small Developments

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Finally grabbed a shot of the long side of this one by the bike path. Apologies for the wide-angle lens distortion.

I wonder how Cambridge’s recent removal of parking minimums would have impacted the design of this project.
 
Cambridge City Councilors Propose Amendment to Loosen Height Limits on Affordable Housing
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Just two years after the Cambridge City Council ordained the 100 Percent Affordable Housing Overlay, an ambitious zoning reform to incentivize affordable housing, a group of city councilors have introduced an amendment seeking to think bigger — literally.

The AHO, implemented in 2020, allowed developers to quickly bypass a long and uncertain permitting process for residential buildings that contained only affordable units and adhered to a set of design standards. It also loosened some zoning restrictions on height, size, and density for affordable projects.

Now, four city councilors — Marc C. McGovern, Burhan Azeem, E. Denise Simmons, and Quinton Y. Zondervan — have introduced an amendment that would significantly loosen height restrictions further.

The proposed amendment would allow AHO projects of up to 13 stories along several major streets including Cambridge St., Mt. Auburn St., Memorial Drive, Massachusetts Ave., Concord Ave., and Broadway, and up to 25 stories in Central, Harvard, and part of Porter Squares. The amendment also relaxes certain other dimensional requirements for AHO projects citywide…

https://www.thecrimson.com/article/2022/11/22/cambridge-zoning/
 
Best possible solution. It can keep the neighborhood character people happy but it removes the crumbling, drafty, super inefficient and energy hungry old buildings. Any idea if the new ones are on heat pump systems? 100-120 years is more than enough lifespan for these original relics.
 

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