As I read the site plan. Blocks H, F, and A are along the north property line, across from Massport property. A is low rise residential. Directly south of H, F, and A are Blocks E and B. B is residential, E, is a combination hotel, residential, A and B are each 64' high; E is 210'
The other residential block, Block C, is at the southeast corner, and is the most distant from the port. C is 63' and 206'
https://goo.gl/maps/r9cRXcURVQiw7Huw8
^^^Boston Edison property on the left of the street; Massport property on the right. The street leads directly to the haul road entrance checkpoint to Conley, and beyond that towards the Channel, is Massports underutilized parcel.
Jumbobuc,
pdf p. 3 on the owner's latest submission to BCDC is an aerial view that shows the haul road, and the Channel (the water), to be to the left of the site, not north of the site.
http://www.bostonplans.org/getattachment/a7e226bb-4d5d-48a0-9e18-fe1da410532b
When you match the aerial image on p. 3 with the image supra of the site plan with the multi-colored blocks,
that is looking north, not westJumbobuc,
https://goo.gl/maps/FGhMNnxUoc6B6SMt5
This is M St, looking west across E. First St., to where it will be extended.
page 3 aerial has north oriented bottom left corner. the colored site plan (page 15) has north on the left.
the plans on pages 10, 11, 12 have a north arrow on them.
that is looking north, not west
I don't live in Southie so I don't have a dog in the fight, but I get the resident's concern. When Massport wanted to expand Conley, Southie pols got an agreement that they needed to move the haul road before they could open an expanded terminal. This was and remains a reasonable request - the existing haul road traversed residential neighborhoods.
In order to preserve the new haul road and at the request of local pols, Massport got the owner of Boston Edison to include an AUL on the property that forbid residential. It's reasonable to question why a 5 year old agreement that was made in part at the behest of your elected representatives is now being tossed aside.
Local politicians apparently don't want any residential.
Article has link to a short video showing effects of sea level rise in the next 30 years on the proposed development.
For now, Redgate remains at odds with elected officials, who say they’d prefer no housing at all on the site. They’re pushing for development that they say would better complement the port and bring jobs to the neighborhood. State senator Nick Collins, who represents South Boston, said it makes little sense to put high-end condos on what is a working waterfront with a bright industrial future.
“The Commonwealth has invested a lot in the success of the port,” Collins said. “We have to get this right.”
https://www.bostonglobe.com/busines...outh-boston/mGq8TFx4ACBFHna00eoM0L/story.html
Methinks Senator Collins' concerns over the high end condo people coming into the working class area has more to do with his future election polling.
Globe: in-a-city-hungry-for-housing-sparks-fly-over-plan-for-more
https://www.bostonglobe.com/busines...an-for-more/ifZeFNEjDEZWPYRWEOTIGN/story.html
Tim Logan Globe Staff
More than two years into planning for the redevelopment of the former Boston Edison power plant that looms over South Boston, a debate still simmers over what to build there.
In recent weeks, developers and a group of South Boston elected officials have been squaring off over whether the 15-acre site along the Reserved Channel should include housing, and how much. It’s the latest and highest-profile development fight in a neighborhood that has had several in recent years. The conflict pits those clamoring for more housing against residents worried about overcrowding.
On Monday, the developers proposed an either/or approach, filing a plan that included an option with 750 condos and apartments — fewer than half as many as in the original proposal — and another with no housing.....
contd
I like the developer's approach. Pick option 1 or option 2 and enough of all the bullshit. I don't understand the NIMBY's however. If your concern is traffic, why would you want an office park which people will drive to from outside the neighborhood, instead of residences? Developer called their bluff and instead of paying extortion has figured out a way to make their $$$ either way and a place that has been vacant since 2007 will now be put to good use.
I'd like to get a good understanding of what the NIMBY's are against as well. Sometimes, overcrowding and traffic are simply go-to PC reasons to rationalize opposition, even if such factors do have merit. So what else is there? Is it opposition against further gentrification? Isn't this area already "yuppified" though? I personally do not see the appeal in fighting to retain a hulking unused decaying plant on the premises.
I agree.
Can someone break it down in black and white for me?
I'd like to get a good understanding of what the NIMBY's are against as well. Sometimes, overcrowding and traffic are simply go-to PC reasons to rationalize opposition, even if such factors do have merit. So what else is there? Is it opposition against further gentrification? Isn't this area already "yuppified" though? I personally do not see the appeal in fighting to retain a hulking unused decaying plant on the premises.
Every public meeting I've gone to in Southie in the last few years - including meetings that have nothing to do with this project - someone demands that the city turn this site into a giant parking garage that would be free for residents, and gets a big cheer.
I'd like to get a good understanding of what the NIMBY's are against as well. Sometimes, overcrowding and traffic are simply go-to PC reasons to rationalize opposition, even if such factors do have merit. So what else is there? Is it opposition against further gentrification? Isn't this area already "yuppified" though? I personally do not see the appeal in fighting to retain a hulking unused decaying plant on the premises.