Everett Waterfront Redevelopment | 52 Beacham Street | Everett

Thus continues the trend of perfectly inaccessible town centers at the confluence of the Mystic and Malden rivers.

The triangle formed by 93, 16 and 1 feels just so damned cut off from everything and hostile to anybody thats not in a car. I mean, I get that its a legacy of the industrial nature of the area, but I can't help but feel that the area would benefit from having a hand higher up guiding development (a la Massport)
 
They are, but in practice that likely means some X amount of the money from the sale of the land will go to an escrow account to where the money is set to clean up the land.

If Exxon Mobile don't sell the land, they are still responsible for cleaning it, but then they can just sit there with the tanks and keep the status quo.


Mike Cantalupa, chief development officer for Davis, told the city council that the developer will seek tax incentives or other public subsidies from city and state officials to help offset environmental remediation and infrastructure costs.

“The first and foremost issue on the site is to clean it up, and it comes at a tremendous cost,” Cantalupa said. “We like to think we bring creative solutions to complex problems. ... We can’t be the sole provider but we need to solve them cooperatively and with the city’s input.”

We don’t know what the ask is yet but I don’t like the developer immediately assuming the city and state will fork over money to assist in cleanup and this cost should have been reflected in the sites sale price.

I can’t remember if Wynn had any subsidies for the cleanup.

(disclaimer- I know nothing about site remediation so I might be 100% wrong here and welcome being told so.)
 
If these tanks as well as the ones on Rt 1A in East Boston close, what will happen to the gas/oil supply in E. Massachusetts. I know its popular to be anti-gas/oil these days, but I don't see enough solar, wind or EVs to keep the power on and vehicles moving. Is anyone considering this?
 
We don’t know what the ask is yet but I don’t like the developer immediately assuming the city and state will fork over money to assist in cleanup and this cost should have been reflected in the sites sale price.

I can’t remember if Wynn had any subsidies for the cleanup.

(disclaimer- I know nothing about site remediation so I might be 100% wrong here and welcome being told so.)

I can't truly say I'm an expert either. My knowledge is based on my family purchasing and remediating a piece of land that is much smaller piece of land. I do recall learning responsibility falls to first the entity that contaminated it, but if the entity no longer exists, then it falls to who whoever owns the land and at the time of the "discovery" that it's contaminated. The discovery ultimately mean the only way for the property owner to remediate was to sell the land and part of the sale went straight into an escrow account. This was mandated by the state.

Maybe the regulations applies differently to properties of this size, though I did followed Encore and it seem to follow the same pattern albeit at a much larger scale. I don't remember if purchasers are allow to waive the escrow and accept responsibility outright. That does seem dumb to me. But if that's true, than it's speculatable that Davis is betting he can get state/local subsidies rather than pay a higher purchase price at the gate.
 
We don’t know what the ask is yet but I don’t like the developer immediately assuming the city and state will fork over money to assist in cleanup and this cost should have been reflected in the sites sale price.

I can’t remember if Wynn had any subsidies for the cleanup.

(disclaimer- I know nothing about site remediation so I might be 100% wrong here and welcome being told so.)
IMO, it would be irregular and financially irresponsible for Davis to buy this property without having a detailed assessment of the types of toxic and hazardous substances present on site, their concentrations, and their location. I assume Exxon sold the property 'as is', but Exxon would also know the extent of any contamination as that should factor in the sales price. In the title conveyance, Exxon may have limited its potential future liability to only that contamination that was not identified at the time of sale.

As for the city helping to pay for some of the clean-up, the city has no responsibility to do so. However, I could see a scenario where Davis could say to the city, if you want large-scale residential on this property, then I need financial help, either through tax credits or abatements. Remediation for residential is the most costly, given the exposure risk to residents, particularly mothers and children. For most other uses, one cleans what one can, then caps the site with a very thick layer of impervious material.
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As an illustration of the prospective scale of remediation, several decades ago, teens broke into an industrial site. I believe it was in Rhode Island. They stole a small jar of liquid mercury. They played with it a bit in the car they rode in, and later in the apartment complex they lived in. Once authorities found out, the car was seized and disposed of in a special landfill, the apartment complex was basically gutted, the furniture taken away to a special landfill, the plumbing ripped out, walls torn apart., etc. etc.
Mercury is very nasty stuff, and I'm not saying that mercury is present at this Everett site, but, illustratively, the level of effort devoted to eliminating mercury in a residential setting is typically enormous.
 
As an illustration of the prospective scale of remediation, several decades ago, teens broke into an industrial site. I believe it was in Rhode Island. They stole a small jar of liquid mercury. They played with it a bit in the car they rode in, and later in the apartment complex they lived in. Once authorities found out, the car was seized and disposed of in a special landfill, the apartment complex was basically gutted, the furniture taken away to a special landfill, the plumbing ripped out, walls torn apart., etc. etc.

This story made me curious. It wasn't Rhode Island. It was in Arkansas https://apnews.com/article/8712aa6a1c4e6eb054c4d8705c8b63fe https://archive.seattletimes.com/archive/?date=19980111&slug=2728116

The curious thing for me is this happened in 1998. AP news says 24-25 pounds recovered with 8 homes but more missing was contaminated with 30 people displaced. But Seattle Times says 21 of 23 pounds were recover with 7 homes and 50 people exposed.

I guess the exact numbers are besides the point. I wonder the consequences all the decades later.
 
How times have changed! In my Bridgewater HS chemistry class in 1967, the teacher passed out drops of liquid mercury for each kid to examine, no precautions taken. We touched it, pushed it around, curious stuff! Explains a lot as we aged! 🤪
 
This story made me curious. It wasn't Rhode Island. It was in Arkansas https://apnews.com/article/8712aa6a1c4e6eb054c4d8705c8b63fe https://archive.seattletimes.com/archive/?date=19980111&slug=2728116

The curious thing for me is this happened in 1998. AP news says 24-25 pounds recovered with 8 homes but more missing was contaminated with 30 people displaced. But Seattle Times says 21 of 23 pounds were recover with 7 homes and 50 people exposed.

I guess the exact numbers are besides the point. I wonder the consequences all the decades later.
Pawtucket Rhode Island
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3576874/

Note: one quart of liquid mercury weighs 25 pounds.
 
If these tanks as well as the ones on Rt 1A in East Boston close, what will happen to the gas/oil supply in E. Massachusetts. I know its popular to be anti-gas/oil these days, but I don't see enough solar, wind or EVs to keep the power on and vehicles moving. Is anyone considering this?
They should transfer all this stuff to New Bedford.
 
I was wondering this as well, looking around the coast in google maps we dont have a ton of empty land on the ocean with rail/highway access for new port facilities. Squantum point in Quincy maybe?
 
The Massachusetts' House's language didn't make it before the Legislature went out of session,

...It’s in this context that the House leaders tucked the Everett language into the back of their economic development bill. Down-to-the-wire negotiations with the Senate got sidetracked by an unexpected revelation that the state may need to budget for nearly $3 billion in income tax credits. But the bill is not dead, by any means.
...
Legislative leaders are waiting for clarity on the exact cost of those credits. They could choose to pass much of the bill in an informal session, when roll calls can’t be taken. Controversial items like this Everett language are generally avoided in informal sessions because a single lawmaker can block a bill.

...Legislators are only expected to meet in informal sessions until January, but it’s possible they could be called back for a rare special formal session to wrap up the tax cuts, bonding proposals, and other goodies in the bill. In a formal session, the Everett measure might very well make it through.

While there is precedent for removing properties from DPAs through legislation, Mystic Station’s road to redevelopment becomes considerably longer without State House help. The next option: ask the state’s Coastal Zone Management office for a formal DPA boundary review. The agency is currently reviewing such requests for two different areas in East Boston. One is led by warehouse developer Jacob Citrin, who wants to remove several industrial parcels on Route 1A from a port area. The second is being pursued by the Boston Planning & Development Agency, and involves properties in and around Central Square.
.....

The fight for the future of this power-plant land might end up not only being about bringing relief to Revs fans who have long hoped for a soccer stadium to call their own. It could end up being about the kind of future we want for the industrial waterfronts in and around Boston, and what it will take to get there.
 
The Massachusetts' House's language didn't make it before the Legislature went out of session,




So what are the next steps for Lawmakers on Beacon Hill regarding the language in this bill? Cause we all know by the that officials come up with a compromise, the neighborhood opposition to thus Stadium will have garnered enough opposition from people in and around Everett.


Usually, I’m an optimist on the issue of the Revs Stadium. But I see this stadium being built in Foxborough (if they build it at all). Because it’s not simply going to be residents in the nearby areas that will be out in full throttle, but the neighbors in nearby Cambridge, Boston and Somerville. I see the Mayors of those communities speaking out on an Everett Stadium (given the close proximity to those said communities).

They could also surprise me and this could just be a blip on the radar screen. Give it to me straight, doc.
 
Deal for nearly 100-acre ExxonMobil property in Everett falls through
The purchase and sale agreement was terminated less than four months after the two parties inked the deal.
The details about why the deal fell apart are unclear, as are the next steps for the site, a crucial piece of Everett’s economic renaissance. It’s possible Exxon could negotiate with Davis for a lower price, revisit other bidders, or put the property back on the market. By the time the deal was initially signed on May 31, Everett had stopped using the property for storing and distributing petroleum products.

A spokeswoman for Exxon declined to comment. All Michael Cantalupa, head of development for Davis, would say by email is that the company does not comment on “ongoing commercial negotiations” — a hint that Davis may not have given up on the property.

The news took officials at Everett City Hall by surprise. Davis and its representatives have been busy in recent weeks making presentations about their plans for the property and kicking off the permitting process. Davis was starting with a 1-million-square-foot first phase that would feature three buildings — 300 to 350 apartments in one, warehouse storage in a second, and advanced manufacturing in the third. Davis envisioned several million more square feet of buildings going up over time, including apartment towers and biomanufacturing plants.
Everett planning director Matt Lattanzi said at least a dozen potential buyers were involved in the first round of bidding for the site. Eventually, he said, that list was winnowed down to three: DH Property Holdings and Marcus Partners out of New York, and Davis out of Boston. With the sale process in mind, city officials last November rezoned the long-industrial property to encourage other uses.

“There was a lot of interest in the land,” Lattanzi said. “The number one factor was the environmental remediation costs.”

The termination of the Davis-Exxon deal became public because of a lawsuit that the Conservation Law Foundation filed against Exxon in 2016, a suit that remains active in Boston federal court and overseen by US District Judge Mark Wolf. (A trial date has not been set yet.) CLF alleges that Exxon didn’t adequately prepare its Everett property for extreme storms and flooding brought about by climate change. CLF is particularly concerned about the petroleum and other chemicals in the soil, and the site’s proximity to Boston Harbor.

Exxon has argued in court that the suit should be rendered moot because the company no longer uses the property. CLF, meanwhile, has said the cleanup remains Exxon’s responsibility, at least for now.

“It’s unclear to us whether the sale has collapsed or whether we’re seeing some sort of negotiating feint by one side or the other,” said Brad Campbell, CLF’s president. “Any development that delays the cleanup or gives ExxonMobil the option of reviving the facility ... is problematic.”

Campbell said CLF is particularly worried about the water treatment system Exxon continues to maintain at the property.

“Our central concern is the risk to the neighboring communities and the environment from the facility, either when it’s in operation or is in its current state,” Campbell said. “We’ll keep fighting until the facility is made safe and no longer a danger to the community and to Boston Harbor.”

Real estate consultant Brendan Carroll says Greater Boston remains a relatively attractive market for global investors, who may be looking for bargains as the economy softens. And large sites that are relatively close to downtown Boston such as the Exxon facility are especially appealing, even if they likely won’t be developed for some time. Aside from environmental contamination, another big hurdle for Everett is the lack of a train or subway station, even though commuter rail tracks bisect the city.

“There remains a lot of excitement around Everett,” Carroll said. “For certain reasons, most notably a lack of dedicated rail transit ... it just seems this is a later 2020s opportunity, which is still exciting to watch.”

The redevelopment of the Exxon site is considered instrumental to Everett officials’ long-term plans to revive its Lower Broadway district, on Boston’s northern doorstep. One major goal: to have hospitality and entertainment complexes, anchored by the Encore Boston Harbor casino that opened in 2019, replace the old industrial uses that once lined the thoroughfare.

Another key piece is a 40-plus acre section of Constellation Energy’s Mystic power plant complex, across Broadway from the casino and recently put up for sale.

Among the potential uses for the Constellation site is a new soccer stadium for the New England Revolution. But the property would need to be removed from a designated port area, which typically limits new construction to marine industrial uses, for that to happen. Proponents in July sought legislation that would take the property out of the port area and also lift a number of tidelands-related development restrictions, freeing the property up. But CLF fought back, arguing that such a move should be done in a deliberative public process and not simply as a measure tacked on to a bigger bill without debate on the merits of the port exemption.

The House added the measure to a wide-ranging economic development bill but time ran out on formal sessions for the year before a compromise could be reached with the Senate on the much broader bill; it remains possible that legislative leaders would take the unusual step of holding a special formal session in the coming weeks to finish work on that bill.
 

Globe article updating on development of this area. Excerpts:

This tug and pull between the old and new has come to the fore amid the bidding for 45 acres of the Mystic property that Constellation no longer uses.
.... the contest was down to two bidders: another energy company, NextEra, and the owner of the casino, Wynn Resorts. NextEra, Lattanzi said, seemed interested in a connection point for underwater transmission lines, possibly from a to-be-built offshore wind farm
.... Wynn would be a logical buyer. It could improve the views around the casino by demolishing much of the power-plant infrastructure (an Eversource substation would need to stay), and the company has already started to develop 13 acres just to the north, directly across the street from the casino. The casino operator could use the power plant land to make the entire stretch more of a destination, possibly even by offering space for the New England Revolution soccer team.

It’s not clear where the bidding stands. Neither NextEra nor Wynn would comment, and all a spokesman for Constellation would say is that the company hopes to conclude the sale process by the end of March. (A spokesman for the Krafts also declined to comment.)

One thing is clear: Neither potential use — another energy facility or a sports complex — is a sure thing. City officials added the power-plant land that is now for sale to an urban renewal zone in 2021, meaning they can seize the property by eminent domain for economic development purposes.

While CLF welcomes a cleanup there, the conservation group also views industrial ports as state assets to be protected — assets that, if they disappear, won’t ever come back.

Ryan said he hopes he can help broker a compromise with the environmental advocates in the coming weeks. One possible solution: a new bill that removes the 45 acres from the port zone, but doesn’t bypass the Chapter 91 process. Both CLF and MyRWA say they would still oppose this. However, it might be an easier sell to the Legislature, particularly now that formal sessions have resumed.

.... the operators of the Schnitzer Steel scrap-metal site next door to Constellation are apparently nervous. And while market conditions stymied the sale of ExxonMobil’s neighboring tank farm in September, it could be back in play soon. The remaining two Mystic turbines might hit the market after they stop burning natural gas next year. When that happens, Constellation’s liquefied natural gas terminal next door, so essential to importing fuel into the region, may no longer be viable, and could eventually shutter as well.
 
As seen from the Somerville High School.

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Multi-family blocks with retail at the street level can be combined to create more dynamic residential areas ( 5 to 1 ratio) The only rationale for having such large areas for High-tech & Labs use is based on having a very large corporation already on board-otherwise seems extreme & unnecessary. Did those numbers come from Planning board or Davis?
 

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