Not necessarily a development per se...but fairly big news anyway. From the BBJ:
"Red Sox, BRA ink $7.3M land-swap deal"
by: Craig Douglas
"Red Sox, BRA ink $7.3M land-swap deal"
by: Craig Douglas
The Boston Red Sox and city planning officials have inked a multi-step deal that will see the ball club pay $7.34 million for permanent ownership and permitting rights around sections of Fenway Park. In return, the city will acquire a nondiscript connector road now owned by the Sox and considered a key to the future planning potential of the Fenway neighborhood.
Sources familiar with the deal said the proposal will be submitted for a vote before the Boston Redevelopment Authority’s board Thursday night. A vote of approval will give the BRA the green light to close the transaction with the Red Sox.
A BRA spokeswoman confirmed that the agreement is in fact in place but declined to offer additional details.
According to a city official close to the matter, the transaction will consist of three steps, if approved. First, the Red Sox will pay the BRA $4.8 million to acquire a permanent easement to close off Yawkey Way — the main thoroughfare bordering the front entrance to the ballpark — for city-permitted events 120 times per year. The team currently blocks off Yawkey Way before and after ballgames as well as for a handful of concerts throughout the year. The team plays 81 home games per season, not including post-season appearances.
Second, the Red Sox will pay another $2.5 million to permanently acquire the air rights above its third-row seats and standing-room-only section of the Green Monster bordering Lansdowne Street. A person familiar with the agreement said the team does not plan to expand the Monster seating or use the new air rights to reconfigure its existing layout, but rather prefers the deal over its existing 10-year air-rights lease arrangement with the city.
Third, the BRA and Red Sox have agreed to allow the city to use its powers of eminent domain to acquire from the team a parcel to create Richard Ross Way, a single-lane street connecting Boylston Street to Van Ness Street. In return the city will pay the Sox $2.6 million.
A person close to the transaction said the area earmarked for Richard Ross Way is a highly valued corridor in the fast-changing Fenway neighborhood and that a transfer of its control to the city will likely unlock even more commercial development going forward.
Following the completion of an extensive rezoning effort in 2004, the Fenway area has seen rapid change and development, including construction of the $200 million mixed-use Trilogy project and the $100 million mixed-use 1330 Boylston project. Currently, there are more than $900 million in projects in the pipeline slated for Boylston Street that will add over 1,000 units of new housing, the BRA reports.