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Probably best to put any responses about the global economic conditions, trade deals, and Boston's resilience to recessions in other threads. Just to head off political tangents at the pass
https://www.universalhub.com/2018/developer-says-large-units-proposed-boylston
An old article, but according to the developer they decided to go with only 108 massive units rather than 200-300 more traditional sized units to reduce the amount of parking needed.
The good thing is everything Ive read so far regarding Boston says that although the luxury market in nyc has peaked and is slowing down, supposedly Boston is expected to chug right along due to chronic undersupply and extremely high demand. I shared a few different articles on here, but Boston has a demand of like 70,000 or something more units than exist in the market so it should keep moving right along. On top of that education and medicine arent anywhere near as volatile and dont have the major swings that finance markets have so that along with strong demand should keep Boston building right through all but the worst slowdowns.
This might be your finest post evaar:
optimistic (so you), factual, uplifting, & tacitly understated.
Add one more thing to the pile of things to blame for this project's demise: minimum parking requirements.
The sad truth is: if this project were on terra firma, it would have started construction a year ago. How many heartbreaks do we need in this city to stop hoping? Air rights suuuuuuuuck.
But most of this project was on terra firma.
But most of this project was on terra firma.
Agree, but I think it matters if any part of a project extends over a highway, even if not the most structurally challenging, because of all of the coordination/regulation/logistics/cross-organization coordination, etc.
I actually think that the structural design work aspect is not the hardest part of air-rights. Not denying it adds cost though.
DivcoWest, founded by Stuart Shiff, is a vertically-integrated operator, owner, developer and real estate partner to the innovation economy. DivcoWest employs 118 employees across corporate offices in San Francisco, Los Angeles, Boston, Washington, DC and New York as well as numerous property management locations across the United States. Since its inception, DivcoWest and its predecessor have acquired more than 42.9 million square feet of commercial space - primarily throughout the United States. DivcoWest has a longstanding history of investing primarily in properties that serve the innovation markets of the economy, seeking to capitalize on DivcoWest’s extensive network of relationships within the markets for which the company has served over the last 25+ years. DivcoWest’s real estate portfolio currently includes existing and development properties consisting of office, R&D, lab, industrial, retail and multifamily.
^also, I think it's worth noting that there are key differences between this project and the Copley Place Tower. Here, the entire parcel has no other revenue-generating purpose or value. In Copley, Simon can just sit for a long time without doing anything because the overall mall is (presumably) profitable as it stands.
One might think these developers would want to capitalize some aspect of their sunk costs eventually? Maybe they think they can get a better return on sunk costs after, as Jumbo suggests, a precedent is set for how costly the coordination costs are in P12?
ROI calculations might look different once uncertainty is replaced with precedent (in either the more or less favorable direction!)
OK, I'm calling it. Simon will decide to move forward with Copley Tower now that Weiner has backed out. Simon was afraid of luxury saturation, and now a big chunk of that planned luxury is not happening.
Too true. The Robert Moses/Jane Jacobs equilibrium here is somewhat out of whack. Perhaps it's time for a bit more Bob and a bit less Jane.As others have alluded to, I think the lesson learned here is don't negotiate against yourself. I'll never understand why developers think they can build goodwill with NIMBY's by proposing to lower the height of their buildings. All that happens is that these radical loons smell blood in the water and become even more extreme.