Changing the Zoning in Coolidge Corner

kz1000ps

Senior Member
Joined
May 28, 2006
Messages
8,726
Reaction score
9,515
The Globe said:
A New Approach to Marketing the Corner


Zoning concept points developers in right direction
By Emma Stickgold, Globe Correspondent | January 21, 2007

One of the newer concepts in urban planning is working its way into the zoning lexicon in Brookline, as planning officials try to figure out how best to keep development from changing the character of some parts of town.

"Form-based zoning" has become a more frequent buzz word among planning officials working to keep Coolidge Corner from changing dramatically in the years to come.

The concept has turned up in PowerPoint presentations and in handouts at regional planning conferences, and some Brookline planners say it may be the best approach to the zoning conundrum presented by Coolidge Corner.

Town planning officials would essentially draw up a street-by-street diagram of what they want Coolidge Corner to look like and use it as a template for what kind of developments would be permitted. The diagrams would show the character they hope to preserve and what developers can do, rather than the usual way of telling developers what they can't do.

"I think it would be very helpful," said Jeff Levine , Brookline's planning director, who has been struggling with how best to develop guidelines for growth in Coolidge Corner. After attending a smart growth conference where the new zoning model was showcased, he became convinced that it offered the best solution.

Form-based zoning would encourage developers to use more creative ways to achieve what they want, by making their case for how their proposed changes are in keeping with the community's carefully laid-out diagrams .

The trick with zoning, town officials say, is figuring out how to protect property rights while keeping neighborhoods from changing too much.

While form-based zoning might seem quite restrictive, advocates say, developers can use it as a tool to figure out how to make their project fit in concert with the community's vision for the area. Some of the details that would normally require a slew of variances and waivers might be allowed in with less hassle as long as the project was in line with the overall look outlined by local officials.

For the towns, it becomes a bit of a production, as officials have to spend considerable time going street-by-street as they draw up detailed maps. Residents and all the requisite boards and committees would have to sign off on it as well.

Several Greater Boston communities, including Lowell and Weymouth, have experimented with this model, with Weymouth officials touting it as a good way to handle the complicated redevelopment of the former South Weymouth Naval Air Station property.

Developers say they are cautiously optimistic about using it in Brookline.

Marge Amster , commercial areas coordinator for the town, said that while Brookline has strong zoning language, preserving the ambience of Coolidge Corner is part of what will help maintain the neighborhood's commercial appeal.

"I think there's a fine balance between allowing a business to establish their identity and retain the look and feel of what's so attractive about Coolidge Corner," she said.

Coolidge Corner has been the subject of many a Town Meeting discussion. In the fall of 2005, Town Meeting approved an interim planning overlay district. At last fall's Town Meeting, town officials were given more time to develop a zoning plan for the area. Another proposal that has been floating around called for about 90 properties in and around Coolidge Corner to remain as three-family homes.

Town officials are hoping to present this as an option for this spring's Town Meeting after hearing from residents.

? Copyright 2007 Globe Newspaper Company.
 
I didn't feel like starting a separate thread for this, as it sorta runs along the same lines of common sense returning to zoning

The Globe said:
Upstairs, Downtown

Apartments, condos are once again appearing above main street stores
By Ron DePasquale, Globe Correspondent | January 21, 2007

It's the classic New England main street look: small businesses, retail shops at street level, with apartments above. And in many places in the region, it's illegal.

But "top of shop" housing, as it is sometimes called, is going legit. Several communities in Massachusetts have loosened zoning rules to allow more housing in their downtowns.

Long-vacant upper stories are being dusted off for residents in old downtowns in Woburn, Framingham, and New Bedford. New mixed-use developments are also being promoted as a way for Cape Cod communities to preserve dwindling open space, and to give single-story buildings in village centers a makeover.

"It brings more life downtown. We have people living and shopping downtown, and they bring another set of eyes downtown," said Don Borchelt , director of the Woburn Redevelopment Authority.

Property owners are rediscovering that putting apartments above their commercial space makes good business sense. "It creates an economic return for upper floors that were otherwise dead space," Borchelt said, "because there's a very weak market for commercial space over the first floor."

It might sound odd that downtown apartments are unusual enough that a spate of new ones constitutes a comeback. But zoning changes made long ago separated communities into single-use sections -- downtowns for commercial only, more outlying districts solely for residential --and generally frowned on mixing the two.

The car was also a culprit in the change. Zoning changes also made more room for parking; once walkable and filled with small homes, downtowns were redesigned for driving and parking, and not living, so people who spent money in the shops under their apartments moved away.

"To have uniformly residential or commercial areas is not natural," said Alex Marthews , executive director of the Waltham Alliance to Create Housing, which has seven affordable apartments above its Moody Street office downtown. "It followed planning theory, rather than the practical way people actually lived and worked, so now you have the enormous negative effects of sprawl. But in the last 10 to 15 years, this type of development has been coming back."

It's all part of the "smart-growth" theory sweeping the planning and development communities, in which new housing and commercial or office space are combined in mixed-use projects near mass transit, such as at suburban downtown commuter rail stations.

But there is also nostalgia at work: The restoration of downtown to the days before malls and office centers moved the commercial center to outlying highways.

"It will look the way it did back in 1900," said Joel Irving of the Kendall building in downtown Framingham, which was once threatened with demolition but is now being renovated. The building's upper floors, long-abandoned, were once used for a hotel and are being renovated into 25 apartments and condos, while concrete additions to the lower fa?ade will be stripped away to reveal original brick work. Irving represents Kendall owner Maurice Khawam .

Spreading this movement may be difficult. Adding more downtown housing often stirs worries about congestion and crime. Local officials and neighborhood groups can intimidate owners of small commercial properties or lead to zoning changes being voted down.

Moreover, fixing or adding upper floors can be expensive, and even impractical if the original structure can't support more weight. Another factor: Residential tenants can be a lot more work for landlords than office tenants.

But the payoff, to communities at least, is clear, said Woburn's Borchelt. Neglected Victorian and Art Deco buildings in that city's downtown had upper floors shaved off decades ago, he said. After Woburn created a downtown mixed-use district that encouraged the conversion of vacant upper stories to housing, the first to be redeveloped on the Busy Bend block was the fire-damaged Pilgrim building, for years Woburn Square's only completely abandoned building.

"Everyone thought I was crazy," said owner Sean Coakley . "Woburn's center was pretty beat up. But when I was younger it was the busiest place around."

Coakley said he was willing to risk redeveloping the property after receiving a state community development grant that requires him to keep new residential units affordably priced for 15 years. The building fa?ade was preserved and four one-bedroom loft apartments were built. None of the renters have moved in yet. The first floor has a Subway sandwich shop.

Five more mixed-use projects on other property, some using the same grant, have been completed or are planned, creating 20 apartments. Sites include two new popular restaurants, Tremonte and Tudo Na Brasa .

Such small-scale "top of shop" developments allow communities to gradually adjust to the changes in their downtowns, said Mark Racicot of the Metropolitan Area Planning Council.

"The scale of development is critical for many communities," he said. "They want to make sure they're not winding up with massive structures, so if they see them broken up into smaller structures, it's not overwhelming."

That approach worked in Dennis, where town officials and the Association for the Preservation of Cape Cod used some clever photo editing in 2004 to convince residents to support new zoning that allows for residential and commercial mixes in the downtown. They had several photos taken of single-story commercial buildings and then altered them to show what they would look like if upper floors were added. The results were images of buildings that are modest in size, and do not appear out of scale or appearance.

"The Cape Cod brand -- quaint villages, the land of sand and water -- has been diminished by sprawling developments along most roads," said Maggie Geist , the association's executive director. "We're working on town center revitalization, and we've heard over and over, 'We don't like density, we don't like height.' And then we ask 'What are your favorite towns on the Cape?' and we hear towns like Chatham, Provincetown, Woods Hole -- the ones with density and taller buildings."

Under the zoning change, downtown Dennis Port buildings can now go up to three stories, as they did in the 1800s before a fire wiped out structures that were replaced with single-story buildings, Geist said. One proposal is for 17 residential units over 11 storefronts on Hall Street. An affordable-housing bylaw, which also encourages mixed-use, led to the conversion of a mostly vacant Telegraph Road building that now houses seven affordable apartments over two retail spaces.

The new apartments also address another Cape problem: lack of affordable housing. "The tourist economy creates a big demand for retail, and we felt we needed to create the opportunity for every new retail project to house the employees who work in retail," said Dan Fortier , Dennis town planner.

A new mixed-use district in Barnstable allows buildings in downtown Hyannis to reach three stories instead of a previous two-story limit. The first such project -- at the site of a former miniature golf course -- will house 16 condominiums over five retail spaces. At Main and Ocean streets, the 1920s fa?ade of a former theater and museum will be preserved as the building is converted to 10,000 square feet of retail at ground level, with 22 condos upstairs.

Two other seaside communities, Falmouth and Manchester-by-the-Sea, built new residential units -- many of which are reserved for lower-income tenants or buyers -- that included retail spaces. In Falmouth, town officials wanted to liven up the streetscape and extend downtown's reach. In Manchester-by-the-Sea, the commercial portion of the Summer Street Condominiums and Apartments was sold to the retailers, which helped make the project financially feasible, said Joanne Graves , executive director of the Manchester Housing Authority, which manages the apartments.

In downtown New Bedford, five old, mostly brick commercial buildings that were either vacant on their upper stories or entirely abandoned are now the Union Street Lofts. The 35 apartments -- including 20 affordable units -- were completed last year and leased within six months, said Mark Hess of HallKeen , the real estate company that developed the properties with a local nonprofit. The redevelopment boosted a city that suffers from crime, poverty, and neglect.

"The central business district was suffering, and we took some of the worst of what New Bedford had and created some of the best of what New Bedford has," Hess said. "If you want safety and life in a downtown, then the best strategy is to keep the lights on at night."

? Copyright 2007 Globe Newspaper Company.
 
Didn't feel this question deserved its own thread:

After being a hole in the ground for quite a while, the lot next to the Coolidge Corner Post Office has steel going up in it. Anyone have any idea what this development is? I've searched a lot on the internet and read the Brookline Planning Department's PDFs about plans for Coolidge Corner, many mention possible redevelopment of the Post Office, but none specifically mention this parcel.

Also, what was the lot before this? Older aerial pictures would suggest a gas station.
 
I thought i heard that was going to be retail, no idea on building size... but i have no real data to back up my statement.
 
kz1000ps said:
"Form-based zoning" has become a more frequent buzz word among planning officials...
...would show...what developers can do, rather than the usual way of telling developers what they can't do.
Form-based zoning is the only kind that makes sense. If you think about it, it's the only kind that's really planning rather than schoolmarmy reaction to naughty developers.

Form-based zoning brought us Haussmann's Paris and Seaside.
 

Back
Top