C
cozzyd
Guest
Everything is within 10 minutes or so... I mean Lechmere and Central are only 20 minutes away.
Also, the majority of Kendall Square (I'm in the wrong thread?) is a bit of a walk to public transportation, no? Makes it hard to then argue that Seaport District needs public transportation to succeed.
I've often been the one to make that argument, so I need to think about this.
Most of the people I know who work in Kendall Square drive there, and not all of them from the suburbs. I interpret this to mean that the public transit access isn't that great and that the cost of driving and parking is an acceptable trade. Whereas it is generally not acceptable trade for people who work in the Back Bay and downtown (both far better served by transit). The SPID is very well served by car infrastructure, so I doubt that is at all an impediment to development.
Kendall probably is now at the point where it could use some enhancement over the single Red Line stop. The obvious and easy one for that would be light rail along the Grand Junction, connecting to MIT, BU, and ultimately the Harvard Allston campus. I'd extend in the other way to hook up with the Green Line trunk at Lechmere/North Station.
Henry -- there are a whole host of privately operated buses of various sizes traversing the Greater Kendall area (i.e. an area bounded by University Park, the MIT Campus, Cambridge center and the immediate Kendall Sq.) including:
MIT, Haaaaaahvd, Cambridge Galleria, Longwood Medical Area
The route of the Grand Junction doesn't go in the right direction to help much
at the risk of becoming a crazy transit pitch - What would work is a separate LRV in a tunnel operated as similar to the Mattapan line, a independent branch of the Red Line usng Green-Line-style single car LRV-equipment to enable high frequency and short platforms.
There would be an interchange on a separate underground platform at Leachemere then a tunnel between Leachmere down 1st to Binney, then along Binney to Galileo, along Galileo to Broadway, then Broadway to Prospect, and finally then Prospect to Mass Ave -- with an interchange to the Red Line at Central -- intermediate Stations would be located at:
1) 1st and Binney
2) Binney and Galileo
3) Broadway and Columbia
This route puts many millions of sq. ft. of state of the art labs and a multitude of the Knowledge Economy jobs just a few steps from transit
Later this line could be extended along Western Ave to the Charles and then under the Charles to the new Haaaahvd complex
Kendall probably is now at the point where it could use some enhancement over the single Red Line stop. The obvious and easy one for that would be light rail along the Grand Junction, connecting to MIT, BU, and ultimately the Harvard Allston campus. I'd extend in the other way to hook up with the Green Line trunk at Lechmere/North Station.
Any word on what is being built outside Kendall, at the corner of Binny & Galileo Galilei? The last "open" parcel of Cambridge Center. Trees and grass are long gone and they're driving piles this week. But with all the other construction on Binney, this project seems to have been lost in the fray...
Biogen Idec expanding Cambridge footprint
Return from Weston includes new buildings
July 20, 2011|By Casey Ross and Robert Weisman, Globe Staff
Biogen Idec Inc. will construct two office buildings as part of its move back to Cambridge, where the biotechnology company is planning an expansive office and research campus to replace the headquarters it opened just a year ago in Weston...
George A. Scangos, chief executive, said the return of 530 employees to Kendall Square will put the firm’s entire Massachusetts workforce in a single location - at the heart of a rapidly growing cluster of pharmaceutical companies near Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology....
The company wants to break ground on its new office buildings there later this year. One will be a 190,000-square-foot building with an address of 17 Cambridge Center; it will be developed by Boston Properties. The other will contain about 305,000 square feet across Binney Street and will be developed by Alexandria Real Estate Equities Inc., which is planning to construct five new buildings in the area in coming years.
With its new structures, Biogen Idec will have its 2,000 Massachusetts employees in six buildings in Kendall Square. The company was represented in its planned move by FHO Partners, a Boston real estate services firm.
ahhh. the 17CC address sounds like that could be it. All the current news hype has been about the new executive building across Binney street - very little about the CC site. Unfortunately, that may mean the building could be as mundane as the existing building it will be attached to. Interesting though - that they are driving piles right against the sidewalk - perhaps a building with any kind of recess from the sidewalk??
Thanks for the reference
You mean the Urban Ring?
Including the current (soon to be vacated) Biogen HQ in Weston...apparently new location doesn't = new architecture.
http://www.cambridgeday.com/2012/03/05/petition-passes-scaling-back-development-around-linear-park/“Mostly I’m concerned about Samuel’s safety,” said Jen Feinstein, a Harvey Street resident who cradled baby Samuel in her arms while speaking during the council meeting’s public comment period, explaining fears her son was at risk from additional traffic if developers got all the density they wanted.
Why can't this connector be a glass bridge up a few stories higher. The Globe has a picture and that is all it seems to be.
I'll guess that the floors and walls of the two buildings were never designed to be the anchors for a suspended 'air' bridge.