bigpicture7
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Corrected!The OG Great Scott had a capacity of 240
Corrected!The OG Great Scott had a capacity of 240
And I hope you take my post as a knock against architectural render makers, and not the OG Great Scott. Of all the concert posters they could have put on that wall...sheesh.The OG Great Scott had a capacity of 240
Well, I'll be damned if Charli XCX, who now routinely fills arenas and is from the UK, once played the old Great Scott. My bad on that one, and good for them if that's the case. Assumed it was the usual render artists sneaking in random stuff we see on a lot of proposals.They are showing past performers that played at the original location to show the importance of bringing it back. Same with passion pit and Phoebe bridgers.
Maybe her fans realized she's old enough to be their mom... it would not shock me at all if she performed there in 2011 or so.I can't say I'm a fan...but I know enough to know Charli XCX just played TD Garden. This render implies quite the ambitious transformation from the 240-seat, sticky-floored dive bar Great Scott was a few years ago to now(Or quite the rapid career downfall of said artist)
allstonia.com
The redevelopment project had been removed from the ZBA agenda on July 29, according to District 9 City Councilor Liz Breadon. A few days later, the organizers of Great Scott wrote in a statement on Instagram which says, “City Hall is now saying we need more public support to give us the final required approval.”
The project had been previously approved by the Boston Planning Development Agency in April, indicating that the project had already completed the Article 80 review process. The process is required for projects such as Great Scott that intend to construct over 15 housing units — and includes a requirement to conduct neighborhood meetings with local abutters and civic groups.
“It seems to be that they are trying to get them to go back out into a civic association in Brighton to make sure that they have an opportunity to get more information about Great Scott,” says Allston resident and Great Scott supporter Lizzie Torres. “It’s confusing to me about why that wasn’t a requirement before they got board approval.”
[...]
Great Scott’s redevelopment proposal was returned to the ZBA docket on August 6. It is currently scheduled for a Zoning Board of Appeals hearing on September 9 during the 11 A.M. session. This step initiates the process for deciding whether Great Scott will be granted zoning relief, which is the final regulatory step before construction permits can be issued.
On Tuesday, Sept. 9, Boston’s Zoning Board of Appeal will review the proposed Great Scott 2.0, part of a new nine-story building at 1 Harvard Ave. that will also include a redeveloped O’Brien’s Pub (currently located at 3 Harvard Ave.) and 139 rental apartments. The meeting, which will determine whether or not the project can move forward, will be livestreamed via Zoom and open to the public.
Showing (virtual) face is a key part of the project receiving approval from the board. A perceived “lack of community support” slowed down the process earlier this year, says Paul Armstrong, CEO of the music and tech company Redefined and one of the three business partners spearheading the project. (Other partners include longtime Great Scott booking manager Carl Lavin and Noannet Group real estate developer Jordan Warshaw).
After filing a letter of intent about the project last December and receiving Article 80 approval in April, the project came to a standstill over the summer when it was pulled from the agenda of July’s Zoning Board of Appeals meeting.
Except I have to work in-office on Tuesday mornings...Nobody here has any excuse to miss the meeting!
Members of the community are strongly encouraged to help facilitate the virtual hearing process by emailing letters in support of or opposition to an appeal to zbapublicinput@boston.gov in lieu of offering testimony online. It is strongly encouraged that written comments be submitted to the board at least 48 hours prior to the hearing. when doing so, please include in the subject line, the BOA number, the address of the proposed project, and the date of the hearing.