How fitting that one of the last remaining vestiges of the boston and providence railroad branch line that was sold off and developed is being replaced by 4 single family homes.
Developer removes trees, scrub along ancient rail line in West Roxbury to make way for four single-family homes
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“A developer is getting ready to build four single family homes off Spring Street in West Roxbury, on a former railroad right of way on which steam locomotives once paused to pick up passengers at a small train stop before thundering across a bridge over Spring Street, hauling commuters from Dedham and West Roxbury up to Park Square in Boston.
The last passenger train ran over the long gone Spring Street Bridge in 1940, but even after tearing down the bridge and selling off the land now occupied by the Star Market plaza, the railroad - eventually Penn Central - held onto the right of way until selling it in 1973 to the MBTA in 1973, which then also sat on the land, as one can see on a map of the area. Also left behind: The stone abutment on one side of Spring Street.
Finally, in 2011, the MBTA sold the half-acre stretch along Powell Street between Spring and Cass to a Powell Street resident for $325,040, according to Suffolk County Registry of Deeds records. In 2020, he sold the land, pretty much entirely covered in trees and scrub, to developer Anthony Petruziello for $1.03 million, the records show.
Last August, Petruziello got building permits from ISD to put in four houses - unusually for Boston, they required no zoning variances. In January, Petruziello sold the land and building rights for $1.45 million to another developer, Ivan Biesty, who has since put up two signs near the abutment about the project advertising "anticipated completion" this December.
The parcel's railroad history, as part of the West Roxbury Branch, dates to the 1840s, with the opening of a 5 1/2-mile Boston and Providence Railroad branch line….”
https://www.universalhub.com/2024/developer-pulls-out-trees-along-ancient-rail-line
It's 100% West Roxbury. The Dedham section of the ROW was already obliterated by other single family construction projects.Says West Roxbury and not Dedham although it is close to the border.
This part is insult to inury. $325k for the MBTA, $628k for the squatter.Finally, in 2011, the MBTA sold the half-acre stretch along Powell Street between Spring and Cass to a Powell Street resident for $325,040, according to Suffolk County Registry of Deeds records. In 2020, he sold the land, pretty much entirely covered in trees and scrub, to developer Anthony Petruziello for $1.03 million, the records show.
The T just wanted it off their books; they didn't care one whit about getting fair value. Same with the Belle Ave. property sales that formally nuked the transpo corridor preservation. They got shockingly little for those too, because value wasn't the point...salting the earth on the transpo hold was.This part is insult to inury. $325k for the MBTA, $628k for the squatter.
Like, as a result of laziness / incompetance / backwards incentives? Or is there actually a rational reason that a good transit agency would do that?The T just wanted it off their books; they didn't care one whit about getting fair value. Same with the Belle Ave. property sales that formally nuked the transpo corridor preservation. They got shockingly little for those too, because value wasn't the point...salting the earth on the transpo hold was.
It was during the Romney Administration / Grabauskas GM'ship, circa 2005-07. Right around the time Amtrak started making renewed and serious noises about NEC capacity vs. Needham Line slots and a few state reps started filing bills (never passed) about another re-study of Millis commuter rail to compel the state to make up its mind about what to ultimately do with the corridor long-term. All those doings were starting to uncomfortably center the discourse around rapid transit conversion as a cure for what ails the corridor, and notoriously NIMBY Dedham was of course having none of that. It was a very expansion-hostile leadership at the top, and they sought whatever quid pro quos would turf the renewed interest. Disposing of the path to the many-times-studied Dedham Center terminus at below market value was the most expedient way to do that.Like, as a result of laziness / incompetance / backwards incentives? Or is there actually a rational reason that a good transit agency would do that?
This part is insult to inury. $325k for the MBTA, $628k for the squatter.
It was during the Romney Administration / Grabauskas GM'ship, circa 2005-07. Right around the time Amtrak started making renewed and serious noises about NEC capacity vs. Needham Line slots and a few state reps started filing bills (never passed) about another re-study of Millis commuter rail to compel the state to make up its mind about what to ultimately do with the corridor long-term. All those doings were starting to uncomfortably center the discourse around rapid transit conversion as a cure for what ails the corridor, and notoriously NIMBY Dedham was of course having none of that. It was a very expansion-hostile leadership at the top, and they sought whatever quid pro quos would turf the renewed interest. Disposing of the path to the many-times-studied Dedham Center terminus at below market value was the most expedient way to do that.
It's not rational, but given who was running the show back then it fit the M.O.
The T just wanted it off their books; they didn't care one whit about getting fair value. Same with the Belle Ave. property sales that formally nuked the transpo corridor preservation. They got shockingly little for those too, because value wasn't the point...salting the earth on the transpo hold was.