stick n move
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I was looking for a downtown/financial district infill thread and realized we surprisingly dont have one. The north end infill thread started being used as a downtown thread for lack of a better option. Even that thread appears to have been made as a different thread and then turned into a north end thread on page 3. I figure its appropriate to finally make a dedicated downtown/financial district thread.
Anyways:
Boston Pinnacle Properties is calling for 15 residential apartment units – 10 studios and 5 one-bedrooms – across four floors above Mediterranean Grill Boston and Dave’s Instant Shoe Repair at 281 Franklin St., in the Financial District. (Matt Stone/Boston Herald)
“A developer looking to place 15 housing units above a Mediterranean grill and shoe repair shop downtown will be seeking approval from the city’s planning agency next month.
This is the first application up for consideration under a pilot program aimed at converting vacant office space into residential use, primarily in and around downtown.
The Boston Planning & Development Agency is scheduled to vote on the proposal from Boston Pinnacle Properties in March, jumpstarting the “Downtown Residential Conversion Incentive Pilot Program,” an agency spokesperson told the Herald this week.
Boston Pinnacle Properties is calling for 15 residential apartment units — 10 studios and 5 one-bedrooms — across four floors above Mediterranean Grill Boston and Dave’s Instant Shoe Repair at 281 Franklin St., in the Financial District.
If approved, construction is slated to start this spring at the 1878 brick and sandstone mercantile Henry Gustavus Dorr Building. Three of the units would be income restricted, meeting a key requirement in the program that 20% of units match what officials consider “inclusionary zoning.”
The total scope of the work is expected to cost nearly $1.6 million, attorney George Morancy wrote in the application, adding the project is “fully compliant with the requirements of the Boston Zoning Code.”
In total, the BPDA has received four applications since October that would create 170 housing units by converting eight high vacancy Class B and C office buildings, according to officials. Candidates range from small local property owners to larger real estate brokers and developers, they said.
The largest project seeks 98 residential units out of three interconnected office buildings on Devonshire and Washington streets. The two others are calling for 24 units at 2 and 5 Longfellow Place and 33 units at 1 and 10 Emerson Place.
Applicants must meet inclusionary zoning requirements, green energy standards and start construction by October 2025. Applications are open until June….”
https://news.google.com/articles/CB...cGFydG1lbnRzL2FtcC8?hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en
Anyways:
Downtown Boston housing revival: Empty office space to be converted into apartments
Boston Pinnacle Properties is calling for 15 residential apartment units – 10 studios and 5 one-bedrooms – across four floors above Mediterranean Grill Boston and Dave’s Instant Shoe Repair at 281 Franklin St., in the Financial District. (Matt Stone/Boston Herald)
“A developer looking to place 15 housing units above a Mediterranean grill and shoe repair shop downtown will be seeking approval from the city’s planning agency next month.
This is the first application up for consideration under a pilot program aimed at converting vacant office space into residential use, primarily in and around downtown.
The Boston Planning & Development Agency is scheduled to vote on the proposal from Boston Pinnacle Properties in March, jumpstarting the “Downtown Residential Conversion Incentive Pilot Program,” an agency spokesperson told the Herald this week.
Boston Pinnacle Properties is calling for 15 residential apartment units — 10 studios and 5 one-bedrooms — across four floors above Mediterranean Grill Boston and Dave’s Instant Shoe Repair at 281 Franklin St., in the Financial District.
If approved, construction is slated to start this spring at the 1878 brick and sandstone mercantile Henry Gustavus Dorr Building. Three of the units would be income restricted, meeting a key requirement in the program that 20% of units match what officials consider “inclusionary zoning.”
The total scope of the work is expected to cost nearly $1.6 million, attorney George Morancy wrote in the application, adding the project is “fully compliant with the requirements of the Boston Zoning Code.”
In total, the BPDA has received four applications since October that would create 170 housing units by converting eight high vacancy Class B and C office buildings, according to officials. Candidates range from small local property owners to larger real estate brokers and developers, they said.
The largest project seeks 98 residential units out of three interconnected office buildings on Devonshire and Washington streets. The two others are calling for 24 units at 2 and 5 Longfellow Place and 33 units at 1 and 10 Emerson Place.
Applicants must meet inclusionary zoning requirements, green energy standards and start construction by October 2025. Applications are open until June….”
https://news.google.com/articles/CB...cGFydG1lbnRzL2FtcC8?hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en