MBTA Construction Projects

Well that didn't take long! This one from today (6/29) is only about 14 hrs after the previous one above:
Wow - did not take long at all for that steel to come down... Curious what's happening this weekend then, with the shutdown? Maybe foundation work for the new headhouse? When you get off at Kendall I was surprised to not only find the old area walled off, but every crevice has been sealed with tape - making sure no dust gets through at all. Big things planned perhaps.
 
Wow - did not take long at all for that steel to come down... Curious what's happening this weekend then, with the shutdown? Maybe foundation work for the new headhouse? When you get off at Kendall I was surprised to not only find the old area walled off, but every crevice has been sealed with tape - making sure no dust gets through at all. Big things planned perhaps.
Yeah, I noticed the same. I'd guess the above-ground steel was the easy part. Perhaps they'll next be jackhammering some at/below-grade concrete from the old head house.
 
It's been a while since I've been through the station, but I believe that Luciano's still uses the grand hall area as an banquet hall / events space for weddings and the like.

Also, there's apparently a new Lebanese restaurant/ nightclub, 961, with decent looking reviews across the hall now.

961 looks to be a great restaurant!

AND they seem to be "one of us" - - love architecture :)

"Drawing strong inspiration from the very skin and massive bones of Union Station, the design leaves exposed the raw concrete and rough brickwork, highlighted by a Modern Mediterranean motif loaded with lights and mirrors.......Our venue is a confluence of past and present — a place where the architectural integrity of Union Station meets modern luxury."
 
961 looks to be a great restaurant!

AND they seem to be "one of us" - - love architecture :)

"Drawing strong inspiration from the very skin and massive bones of Union Station, the design leaves exposed the raw concrete and rough brickwork, highlighted by a Modern Mediterranean motif loaded with lights and mirrors.......Our venue is a confluence of past and present — a place where the architectural integrity of Union Station meets modern luxury."
I went to a High School Graduation ceremony at Polar Park recently, and I was impressed with the area around both Polar Park and Union Station. Looking at the 961 website, I absolutely want to try it. Too bad it's quite a haul from Scituate.........even by train. :)
 
Complete triangle structure, steel and all, are down.
 

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OK, who else is 'this old' here??? Scanning old negatives, and since we are talking Kendall Outbound - here's a photo from an upper floor of the Marriott right after it opened. The courtyard is still under construction, and we can see the stairs and elevator for the "new" Kendall Outbound headhouse before the steel and glass were put up. (This is a new entrance after they expanded the RL to 6 cars).
 

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Any hope that the T will repair the Alewife atrium during this Red Line closure? They’re repairing the roof of the Russell Field head house.
 
Any hope that the T will repair the Alewife atrium during this Red Line closure? They’re repairing the roof of the Russell Field head house.
I doubt it since according to media the T is planning to replace the garage and station with a new development.
 
They have been repairing the garage for years. Leaving the atrium with a plywood covered scaffold reeks of the leadership not caring.
 
There's a line item in the CIP for atrium repairs, in addition to money for structural work. I suspect they'll keep patching the garage for another few years while they get the redevelopment ducks in a row, especially since the T just awarded a structural repairs contract. By the description I don't think it's for the atrium however.

I imagine that someone over at the T's central office is like what is money even? (spending $10m every 3 years just to keep a garage from losing a concrete deck.)
 
At what point should they just demolish it now even without redevelopment plans? Frankly it seems like we're past that point.
 
I wasn't able to find up to date data, but the Alewife garage was incredibly popular pre-covid - pre ridership decline, as Driving from the end of rt 2 to downtown via Fresh Pond Parkway and SFR is painful in rush hour. The rapid transit terminals usually had extremely well patronized garages. When the Boston MPO last collected data, there were an average of just 18 unoccupied spaces, including handicap.
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I think it's safe to assume that usage is less than this currently given depressed ridership, shutdowns and slow zones, but I think we all hope that ridership rebounds. And assuming that's a weekday count, at $9 per day (let's say there 250 workdays) that is worth over $5m per year to the MBTA, not including whatever number parks there over the weekends. If you further assume that those folks would have driven downtown and not taken the T, in 2018 that would have accounted for a solid 2% of red line ridership, even at single occupancy. I think a garage here, in any universe until the Red line is extended to 128, makes sense.
 
But is that even enough to maintain the garage at this point?
Maybe is probably the answer. I suspect that the Alewife garage isn't exempt from the T's history of deferred maintenance, since it was increasingly decrepit by 2015, but it's actually not that old. It opened in what, 1985?

Full repair history:
2007, $1.4M structural & concrete repairs
2012, $2.9M structural & concrete repairs, drainage and skylights
2015, $5M project structural repairs contract completed. (Per the beacon; likely change orders to the above 2012 contract to expand scope given the 36 month timeline. I Can't find the actual mbta contract, however)
2018, $5.7M structural & concrete repairs
2021, $3.2M structural & concrete repairs
2021, $7.2M replacements of fire alarm system, busway ventilation, emergency lighting, defective plumbing including sprinkler risers and piping.
2024, $8M structural & concrete repairs, contract ends 2027.

But over the past 20 years of repairs completed and envisaged, that works out to about $1.5m annually, not including the atrium repairs which weren't to be anticipated. That latest contract is over the next 3 years, so it's about $2.7m a year. Given depressed ridership, it may just barely break even, but costs are clearly escalating.
 
Maybe is probably the answer. I suspect that the Alewife garage isn't exempt from the T's history of deferred maintenance, since it was increasingly decrepit by 2015, but it's actually not that old. It opened in what, 1985?

Full repair history:
2007, $1.4M structural & concrete repairs
2012, $2.9M structural & concrete repairs, drainage and skylights
2015, $5M project structural repairs contract completed. (Per the beacon; likely change orders to the above 2012 contract to expand scope given the 36 month timeline. I Can't find the actual mbta contract, however)
2018, $5.7M structural & concrete repairs
2021, $3.2M structural & concrete repairs
2021, $7.2M replacements of fire alarm system, busway ventilation, emergency lighting, defective plumbing including sprinkler risers and piping.
2024, $8M structural & concrete repairs, contract ends 2027.

But over the past 20 years of repairs completed and envisaged, that works out to about $1.5m annually, not including the atrium repairs which weren't to be anticipated. That latest contract is over the next 3 years, so it's about $2.7m a year. Given depressed ridership, it may just barely break even, but costs are clearly escalating.
The Commonwealth in general had a really bad history of poor quality construction of government funded facilities from the 1970's into the 1980's. Particularly highly suspect concrete supply (likely violation of the salt content in the concrete, resulting in premature degradation). Look at the UMass Boston campus garage structure underpinning the campus, the Lynn MBTA garage (condemned) as other examples. Perhaps some mobbed-up contractors?
 
Maybe is probably the answer. I suspect that the Alewife garage isn't exempt from the T's history of deferred maintenance, since it was increasingly decrepit by 2015, but it's actually not that old. It opened in what, 1985?

Full repair history:
2007, $1.4M structural & concrete repairs
2012, $2.9M structural & concrete repairs, drainage and skylights
2015, $5M project structural repairs contract completed. (Per the beacon; likely change orders to the above 2012 contract to expand scope given the 36 month timeline. I Can't find the actual mbta contract, however)
2018, $5.7M structural & concrete repairs
2021, $3.2M structural & concrete repairs
2021, $7.2M replacements of fire alarm system, busway ventilation, emergency lighting, defective plumbing including sprinkler risers and piping.
2024, $8M structural & concrete repairs, contract ends 2027.

But over the past 20 years of repairs completed and envisaged, that works out to about $1.5m annually, not including the atrium repairs which weren't to be anticipated. That latest contract is over the next 3 years, so it's about $2.7m a year. Given depressed ridership, it may just barely break even, but costs are clearly escalating.
That figure ignores all other regular maintance costs, any costs from parking enforcement, and other regular costs. While I don't know for sure how much those are, they've got to be taking a big chunk of that parking revenue as it is.
 

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