stick n move
Superstar
- Joined
- Oct 14, 2009
- Messages
- 11,117
- Reaction score
- 15,010
Letter from the mayor re: the future of Eastern Nazarene College
It should be mixed use. Quincy had been doing a decent job at housing development but to limit the use of the old college just to 55 and up communities seems short sighted. Every single train station in Quincy has the ability to support more housing.You see, density makes sense out up in the quarries where it's far away from everything. That way there's space for 80% of the land to be surface parking to accommodate all the cars needed. Why would you want dense residential development in the middle of a dense neighborhood like Wollaston? Next you're going to tell me the surface parking at Wollaston station should be mixed use
I do hope the sarcasm in my post was evident.It should be mixed use. Quincy had been doing a decent job at housing development but to limit the use of the old college just to 55 and up communities seems short sighted. Every single train station in Quincy has the ability to support more housing.
From experience, the planning board in Quincy has had a lot of trouble understanding what it meant to have a parking ratio that was a fraction of one. They were like how can you have 0.85 of a spot? It's tough trying to get people to move on from their auto-centric mindset.I do hope the sarcasm in my post was evident.
Quincy has simultaneously been one of the best performers in the region at adding housing but has also been absolutely auto-oriented in the way it's done it. I don't have data on spots versus units but every single development I've encountered has been that way, no matter how close to the red line.
its tough to get people to learn basic math...From experience, the planning board in Quincy has had a lot of trouble understanding what it meant to have a parking ratio that was a fraction of one. They were like how can you have 0.85 of a spot? It's tough trying to get people to move on from their auto-centric mindset.
Once the MBTA completes construction of a new bus depot on Burgin Parkway, Quincy plans to acquire the current depot on Hancock Street and covert it to open space.
Mayor Thomas Koch said that the state owes the city the land for its past cooperation with the MBTA.
I hope "recreational use" does not include a parking lot for the stadium next door.On Wednesday, the city's planning board signed off on the proposal, allowing city council to take it up as early as September when it returns from summer recess.
My understanding from previous city statements is that they want to put a facility on it, like a field house or something. Having trouble finding exactly where I'd seen that before but people mention that here as well.Quincy Planning Board OK's plan to restrict uses of bus depot property.
I hope "recreational use" does not include a parking lot for the stadium next door.