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took a visit to portland recently, nice little city y'all got there
Avesta Housing submitted a much-anticipated proposal to city planners on Thursday for a 64-unit housing project that would be built in the city’s West End neighborhood and target mostly low-income families.
The five-story West End Apartments would be built at 586 Westbrook St., site of Le Variety and the West End Neighborhood Resource Hub, and would include ground-level commercial space to house both the convenience store and the social service agency, according to Avesta’s application.
Woodcock’s anticipated next step would be to rule on the merits of the company’s claim against the Clear Skies ordinance.
Whatever the outcome in U.S. District Court, the case is expected to wind up in the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Boston and take another two to three years to reach a conclusion.
“(The company) will not complete the reversal project for at least another three or four years,” Woodcock said. “Three or four years is a lifetime in the oil business.”
In reference to an earlier post / rumor that the redevelopment of 58 Fore St. was on hold until the Portland Pipeline lawsuit was settled
A Federal judge just ruled against SoPo in the city's motion to dismiss the suit. It looks like this lawsuit will be going on for at least another 2 years according to the PPH article.
http://www.pressherald.com/2017/12/...h-portlands-plea-to-dismiss-pipeline-lawsuit/
So the question is, how will this impact the 58 Fore St. / Portland Foreside redevelopment?
I know for a fact that Jim Brady holding off on that development until he knows what's happening with the oil reversal scenario. Reason is simple. His condos are directly across, and who would pay up to 1.75 million for a condo (going rate for penthouse now with the one next to the new Marriot going up) when they could spend that for an incredible home anywhere else on the coast?
Well as the article says, this lawsuit could be tied up for several years. Does that mean the entire Foreside Redevelopment is on hold?? Even the office and retail space??
It seems somewhat foolish to plan a major development around the outcome of a lawsuit in another city.
Perhaps not when investing a couple of hundred million dollars. The 3rd floor and higher condos for this project will have 3 oil tanker moorings directly blocking the view of Portland Headlight in the distance. You can see Portland Headlight from Eastern Prom, of course. These moorings would be quite active if this project goes through. Check out the line of sight on Google Maps. By the time this would finish, a Penthouse in Portland could be nearly 3 million (currently at 1.75 million) and you could buy a sweet house on the coast with that kind of coin.
Even if Portland Pipeline Co. loses this lawsuit, that tank farm near bug Light will clearly still be there for at least a decade.... The 58 Fore St. developers can't have gone through the entire master plan process with the expectation that those tanks would be torn down anytime soon... Or that the oil terminal near bug Light would never see another ship....And besides those tanks are really a minor blotch on the landscape, especially since you can turn your head 20 degrees and get a spectacular view across the harbor towards Peaks Island
A brief overview of some proposed and under-construction office space in Portland in today's Press Herald: http://www.pressherald.com/2018/01/02/portland-now-has-10-new-office-buildings-planned/
The article confirms that the work on the Ocean Gateway Garage will add office space, which should be interesting. I guess that the office space will occupy the new bulge that will jut out of the garage towards Fore Street. I've seen the external rendering of this but I'm having trouble imagining habitable office space on the inside.
Most interestingly a CBRE rep says that he expects at least one major employer to propose a downtown Portland relocation this year. Perhaps we will get a new office tower proposal after all!
For similar reasons I find it hard to believe any big company is going to pay a premium for new offices on Thompson's Point. It's got many of the same issues with most suburban campuses – it's pretty isolated, with no place nearby to get coffee or even for a regular lunch and no good bike or pedestrian connections to the rest of the city. These companies relocating downtown are relying on significantly higher rates of walk/bike/transit commuting among their workers in order to offset parking costs, but that's gonna be a tall order on Thompson's Point.
Could be L.L. Bean. They've long had having trouble recruiting and retaining creative workers with their suburban HQ in Freeport (it's not even in the village), although the new METRO Breez route might be helping them. Plus, their current HQ office building is pretty dingy.
Of course, locating headquarters offices is a lot different than relocating the entire business. I've heard that WEX is keeping a lot of back-office jobs in South Portland even after they move into their new building on the waterfront.
For similar reasons I find it hard to believe any big company is going to pay a premium for new offices on Thompson's Point. It's got many of the same issues with most suburban campuses – it's pretty isolated, with no place nearby to get coffee or even for a regular lunch and no good bike or pedestrian connections to the rest of the city. These companies relocating downtown are relying on significantly higher rates of walk/bike/transit commuting among their workers in order to offset parking costs, but that's gonna be a tall order on Thompson's Point.
But Portland has to be even more aggressive getting companies to locate here. The companies will, if you give them the incentives.