lunardinosaur
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- Oct 10, 2022
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It's horrid. What a bait and switch.
What a surprise - GRAYS. MEHHad to dig a bit for this, but found some elevations.
Some words I'd use are: "exceptionally average" and "breathtakingly nondescript"
View attachment 46674
What in the world happened to the height of this?? Seemed to me all of this block was 12+ stories or so… what a jokeHad to dig a bit for this, but found some elevations.
Some words I'd use are: "exceptionally average" and "breathtakingly nondescript"
View attachment 46674
It looks like this would only occupy the corner of the block, and not extend all the way to Pearl Street. That would explain why the "Pearl" elevation is a big blank wall, which otherwise wouldn't be allowed in Portland's zoning code.I'm confused by the elevations - why is the Cumberland view shorter than the Pearl/Myrtle elevations? Is Lot 3 not the one the stretches along Cumberland?
So this is for the back corner facing Cumberland?Had to dig a bit for this, but found some elevations.
Some words I'd use are: "exceptionally average" and "breathtakingly nondescript"
View attachment 46674
This is what I'm wondering - originally Lot 3 was 1/3 of the block and fronted Cumberland, Pearl and Myrtle. The red box above is to scale based on dimensions on the elevations, so how does the latest hotel plan fit with this?So this is for the back corner facing Cumberland?
And so the blank walls are what will be built against by the Hotel and Condos facing Congress?
What is going where the Portland Pay and Spray is in the top corner (Cumberland & Pearl)?
Uninspired architecture, straight out of an application. No one went to architectural school for this. This is a re-use from Anywhere, USA, saving some money. Market Square Architects from TX/NH/MO? Maybe they should have hired a company from ME that cares about Portland. What a missed opportunity.Had to dig a bit for this, but found some elevations.
Some words I'd use are: "exceptionally average" and "breathtakingly nondescript"
View attachment 46674
"I saw it on Fox News" is quite a self-own, so here's some more credible information about the MaineHousing program in Brunswick:Perhaps Dasco was able to get a Fed subsidy for this affordable housing part. Mills just promised to pay rents for up to two years for migrants to live in a new housing project that was finished in Brunswick, and so that is from federal or state money. It was all over the wire reports and Fox News, with some of the new "renters" embarrassed by the lavish conditions. Even 50 Cent on his Instagram was peeved over it.
I don't think this will be a justification when the buses start arriving. I was working and living in Manhattan not long ago, and my friends there say the situation is untenable. It's also not a good idea with so many Mainers on affordable housing lists, to do this. I didn't see the Fox News piece, though there is a valid point in it, I would assume. The dumb thing about this program is not allowing the men to work because a man's self-worth and confidence largely comes from that. Sitting in a nice apartment for much of the time without anything to do perhaps compels someone to use drugs, and that kind of lifestyle is conducive to "finding" money to keep it going."I saw it on Fox News" is quite a self-own, so here's some more credible information about the MaineHousing program in Brunswick:
https://www.pressherald.com/2023/05/15/hundreds-of-asylum-seekers-apply-for-brunswick-housing/
The reason the state financed the project this way is because they'd been spending much, much more money on hotel rooms during the pandemic. Paying rent is a lot cheaper (and more useful) than paying for a new homeless shelter. Beyond that, there's a robust body of economic evidence that asylum-seekers pay back more considerably more in taxes within 20 years than they receive during their first few years of arrival. In a state with severe labor shortages, this is one of the strongest economic development investments that Governor Mills can make.
https://www.nber.org/digest/aug17/what-happens-when-refugees-come-united-states
I follow housing finance pretty closely and there's been no public discussion of any similar kind of subsidy for this project here in Portland. IIRC the state used pandemic relief funds for the Brunswick project, and those are pretty much tapped out by this point.
As @Cosakita18 said, there's an upcoming deadline for tax credit applications at MaineHousing, so developers are putting in applications now. Because this project has a Framework Plan approval in hand it stands a better chance of getting its approvals in time to meet the MaineHousing deadline, but we'll see.
"I saw it on Fox News" is quite a self-own....
I don't think this will be a justification when the buses start arriving. I was working and living in Manhattan not long ago, and my friends there say the situation is untenable. It's also not a good idea with so many Mainers on affordable housing lists, to do this. I didn't see the Fox News piece, though there is a valid point in it, I would assume. The dumb thing about this program is not allowing the men to work because a man's self-worth and confidence largely comes from that. Sitting in a nice apartment for much of the time without anything to do perhaps compels someone to use drugs, and that kind of lifestyle is conducive to "finding" money to keep it going.