Portland: Zoning change sought for Munjoy Hill condo project
PORTLAND ? Developer Greg Shinberg is seeking a zoning change to build a condominium project at 121-135 Sheridan St., on Munjoy Hill.
He's asking for a conditional zoning change to build a 21-unit condo building next to an existing single-family home, said Alexander Jaegerman, Portland's planning director.
A workshop on the proposal is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. Tuesday in Room 209 of City Hall.
Portland: Portland panel to review city parking requirements
PORTLAND ? City officials are planning to review parking requirements in Portland to see whether new residential construction can more often share parking areas with existing commercial development.
The goal is to make better use of existing parking rather than create more paved areas, said City Councilor James Cloutier, chairman of the community development committee.
Cloutier said his committee also wants to consider future development for public works land in Bayside and 3.5 acres of city-owned land on the eastern waterfront.
Portland: Work on ship terminal to cause detours of traffic
PORTLAND ? The intersection at Commercial and India streets will be closed next week for road work related to construction of the Ocean Gateway cruise-ship terminal, city officials said.
Traffic will be detoured Monday through Friday while crews work on water and natural gas lines. In addition, foot traffic on the Eastern Promenade Trail will be detoured to Fore Street for the duration of the $15 million terminal project, which is scheduled to be finished in late fall 2007.
Neighbors remain concerned over Morrill's Corner project
A proposal to build housing and a Stop & Shop supermarket at Morrill's Corner is still raising concerns among neighbors and Planning Board members.
Several people questioned the developer's plans for addressing pedestrian safety, parking requirements, noise concerns and traffic congestion at the busy intersection of Forest and Allen avenues during a workshop Tuesday evening.
They also questioned part of the 20-acre proposal that would increase the size of the Portland Boxing Club from 14,000 square feet to 42,000 square feet.
"It does not, to me, meet what (it) was zoned for," said board member Shalom Odokara. "I don't see myself voting to approve that."
Packard Development of Newton, Mass., wants to build a 66,000-square-foot supermarket, 20 townhouse-style condominiums, 63,000 square feet of additional retail space with 11 apartments above and a 12-unit apartment complex. The project, known as Morrill's Crossing, would include 7 acres of open space, including a public recreation field and a pedestrian walkway.
The $20 million project, which received special zoning approval from the City Council in 2004, is scheduled for a final public hearing before the Planning Board at 7:30 p.m. July 11. Odokara and other board members asked for additional information before that hearing, which will consider the project's compliance with site plan, subdivision and traffic standards.
Packard's engineers described a variety of street improvements that would be made to improve traffic flow and pedestrian safety at the intersection. Those plans include widening travel lanes and sidewalks, improving traffic lights and train-crossing controls and moving the entrance to a nearby apartment complex.
"There's no question their mitigation plan is going to help," said Thomas Erico, Portland's traffic consultant. Erico also called the project's parking plan "sufficient" and noted that the pedestrian-crossing proposal was based on the state's plan for the intersection. Erico recommended a follow-up study to make sure the developer's plan works.
David Roy, who owns Portland Dry Cleaners on Allen Avenue, said he believes the improvements will help traffic in front of his store. "I think it will allow my customers to leave more safely and turn in without holding up traffic," Roy said outside the meeting.
Thomas Johnson, an Albany, N.Y., engineer hired by Hannaford Bros. to help neighbors who oppose the project, questioned whether the proposed widenings are possible given right-of-way limits and sidewalk obstructions.
Peggy McGehee, attorney for the Morrill's Corner Neighborhood Association, questioned the developer's plan to address noise created by the supermarket and whether the project's 697 parking spaces would be enough, especially the 34 spaces for the recreation field.
The City Council granted a special zoning contract for the project in November 2004 and agreed to sell 3.5 acres of city-owned land to the developer for $530,000.
my response:
Dear Portland Press Herald, please stop writing about people who oppose projects, you only give the false perception that everyone is against development, which leads some people, who are like sheep, to follow the crowd, since if everyone else is saying it (thats the false perception) then it must be true. Your paper did the same thing about the boulos tower planned in 2005, which old folks in franklin towers believed would create wind tunnels that would knock them off of their feet as they crossed cumberland avenue. Earth to everyong in maine: two adjacent 17-story towers would not have created a wind tunnel, sorryy. and also, since when have supermarkets been unreasonably noisy, as they are feared to be in this story? Morril's crossing site looks like a dump right now, I for one am for anything that will change that. wake up people, hold the developers to a high standard of construction and traffic improvements, certainly, but DO NOT block this project and lose an opportunity that may not arise again for years.