Portlander
Senior Member
- Joined
- Apr 14, 2010
- Messages
- 2,599
- Reaction score
- 5,651
I wonder if Redfern is aware that this property is available?
Dang, from 2014!!
Building E is well underway. I didn’t see any indication construction has begun on the other buildings.I don't think these updates have been posted elsewhere on this forum? Most of the new renderings look very similar, but one does have a view of the 5 story building and the whole development is now 125 units. Here's the list of alterations from Kaplan Thompson:
View attachment 37024
View attachment 37025
View attachment 37026
Does anyone know if the ReCode was approved by the Planning Board?The "ReCode" re-draft of the city's zoning ordinance is coming up for a final vote at the Planning Board tonight.
It also needs City Council approval next, but there's lots of good stuff in here so consider sending a quick message to planningboard@portlandmaine.gov if you like what you see:
https://portlandme.portal.civicclerk.com/event/6984/files/report/3668
Approved with amendments by the Planning Board. Now the real battle begins....the City Council.Does anyone know if the ReCode was approved by the Planning Board?
The tallest parcels will be zoned for 325 ft. Which would equate to a 28-30 story building.My gut feeling is after the Recode is approved, you should start seeing proposals come through. I would think to see Portland Sq come back as a 30-35 story building?
You can forget about USM becoming much more than it already is. It’s a regional university based in the humanities. The Orono campus controls the purse strings. It’s an R1 research university that did roughly $250 million in research last year (USM did around $30 million). The System isn’t going to shift that. They are about to start construction on new or gut renovations to all the engineering and computer science facilities (roughly $150 million). They are spending $25 million to upgrade the campus electrical infrastructure and are currently in design for a $150 million energy center to handle increased demand in electricity and such. Add in the $210 million on athletic facilities. There is a reason the “UMS” (not to be confused with “USM”) graduate center is on Fore Street (with the Alfond grant going to renovating and buying the building) and not on USM campus…Orono said no way to their graduate school of business being on USM campus. Even the law school is its own separate entity now.Boston has a somewhat problematic office vacancy rate yet new towers are still being built. Two recent 50 story plus office towers include luxury condos, and State Street Bank just finished a 46 story office tower near TD Garden. And then there is the Seaport District where Amazon recently built two towers for robotics, A.I., and cloud computing workers. The mayor suggested that they might have to raise residential property taxes to offset the commercial space taxes that have been substantially reduced after Covid.
https://www.nbcboston.com/news/loca...-protect-residents-from-sudden-shock/3501467/
But what these new builds indicate is that there is strong demand for new higher tech or different designed office space. I think a new tower next to or squeezed in between the two WEX buildings would be leased out with relatively few problems. Portland needs to focus more on science and tech for its economy, or in the manner that Boston is because A, Portland is so close to Boston (commutable), and B, the science and tech industries are growing at a seemingly exponential rate. USM should step up with a beefed up biology, or biotech program, with a tall and substantial building on campus. IDEXX, Covetrus, WEX, Tyler Technologies, and Roux are the more dynamic places to work and study for tech now in Southern Maine. Retail giant LL Bean will stagnate as retail competition is literally from around the world now with online purchasing becoming the norm. Bath Iron Works? I guess war will always be a thing, but then again tech will reduce or adjust seafaring weaponry (big boats). At Harvard and MIT, there are many partnerships with tech companies that result in post graduate students and staff working in a kind of symbiotic relationship. Harvard's new science center in Allston inlcudes over 200 private company scientists working on stem cell research. Roux is also on top of this idea and so should USM as a focus on the humanities is certinaly not enough to produce substantive high paying jobs. Creating new concert violinists and ballerinas at their new $60 million dollar arts center is wonderful for high or higher culture, but a de facto minimal impact for the economy.
Thanks. Long time viewer. Not sure how much I’ll chime in but we’ll see.Welcome to the forum Josh.