RandomWalk
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If the community doesn’t extract funds for grade separating Park St from the developers, they aren’t even trying.
As it stands, housing is specifically excluded in the FAB zones.How about some housing? We keep getting told there's a crisis.
Crisis for you maybe, but for the people in power and their donors it doesn't seem to matter.How about some housing? We keep getting told there's a crisis.
Interesting to note that Somerville recently adopted what is considered to be a very progressive zoning code that includes a lot of potential new housing.As it stands, housing is specifically excluded in the FAB zones.
Yea - this is an existing industrial zone, and you really don't want housing next to certain types of businesses. Housing will come, but do we really want it next to chemistry labs, hazardous waste collection points, and sewage processing?Interesting to note that Somerville recently adopted what is considered to be a very progressive zoning code that includes a lot of potential new housing.
Housing probably has issues penciling out, given the affordability requirements and the general NIMBY position on housing. Tangentially, I think the Star on Beacon slated for housing, so they may be hoping to avoid the issue.
Early public comment suggests an uphill battle for a $3.3 billion project that would add 1.6 million square feet of space to the Somernova business complex in Somerville’s Ward 2, though the group behind the proposal is adding sweeteners such as more investment in the community and the potential for housing,
Rafi Investments, which owns the Somernova properties, submitted an official proposal Dec. 14 for its campus expansion, changing zoning to create a Climate & Equity Innovation Sub-Area Overlay District.
The amendment proposes four building types, three of which exist in Somerville’s zoning code.
One is a general building, which typically features commercial space on the bottom floor with residential uses on the top floors; current zoning in the Somernova district does not allow it, but residents complained in October that Rafi’s plan lacks housing, and in the proposed zoning, residential uses would now be permitted throughout the area.
“We heard from everyone about housing,” said Russ Preston of Somernova at a Dec. 15 Union Square Neighborhood Council meeting. Although it’s not in the current plan, “we think it would be appropriate to put that as a proposed use under the new zoning.”
Another building type is the midrise podium tower, a type of building with a base that becomes more slender as it builds into a tower. The midrise podium would have a minimum of four stories and no maximum stories. The Somernova plan proposes a maximum building height of 16 stories that includes two of mechanicals such as air conditioning and heating equipment.
The third building type is a block building with a three- to six-story “podium” section and a tower; this use would have no maximum height.
The final “flex commercial” building type is new to Somerville’s zoning code but similar to one in the city’s “fabrication” zoning districts. These buildings would feature “high floor-to-floor heights, expansive windows, wide corridors, service elevators and multiple loading docks,” which mirrors the language used to describe fab district buildings.
Should the zoning pass, the proposed development would take place in three phases over 10 years, starting with the community center and research and development building on Tyler Street. Phase 2 would consist of a redevelopment of Park Street and a nine-story building that would include Aeronaut Brewing; Phase 3 would include a microforest and a redevelopment of Dane Street, as well as more space for lab buildings.
The reason “is so that we can work with the Union Square Neighborhood Council, city staff and neighbors to revise the proposed Somernova project and respond to comments that have been received,” said Kristin Phelan for the Rafi Investments and Somernova development team in a Saturday email.
It was exciting to see a large commercial space dedicated to non biotech use.Somernova expansion plan is being withdrawn, with reintroduction likely coming in the spring - Cambridge Day
Plans for a $3.3 billion, 1.6 million-square-mile expansion of the Somernova tech and business campus are being withdrawn for now, the developer said.www.cambridgeday.com
It is highly unclear to anyone if Somernova was actually going to be a Greentech space in practice: it was probably branding for what would end up being mostly biotech. Even Greentown labs has a ton of traditional biotech startups. As you note, the climate tech sector is much smaller.It was exciting to see a large commercial space dedicated to non biotech use.
Apparently Greentown labs is the largest climate tech incubator in the US (significant enough that the future King of England visited it less than a year ago as part of the Moonshot awards).
As someone involved in the VC space, these facts don’t align with momentum I’m seeing on the ground or in conversation with others. Losing an opportunity to advance this becoming a real hub really bums me out.
I live a short walk away and it’s one of the more walkable areas of the entire region. I will never understand people complaining about traffic in such a location.
The neighborhood rose up in resistance to the zoning changes allowing traffic issues, scale, transportation and displacement of artists from the existing buildings. Rafi says they will redesign and a small group has been identified to advise.Park St. would get a road-over-rail grade crossing elimination if GLX-Porter ever happened; the traffic volumes on that street are simply too high to have an LRT crossing there. Therefore the likeliest place for a stop is going to be at Conway Park, which already has a fat walkway direct to Somerville Ave. along with ample room for the station. Though a station there could well have a ramp up to the new Park St. overpass. It's very unlikely to ever be on the Park-Dane block as there's just not enough width to squeeze station facilities. If this developer wanted it there they'd have to be baking in the width allowances right up front, which the renders don't show.
So yes...a one block-adjacent station is 100% feasible and well within their purview to advocate for. It's just not likely to be right directly at their front door.
A future MBTA stop? Maybe wishful thinking of "build it and they will cone", but I always love seeing the zeal of including features of future transit extension proposals in renderings. We'll seeSomernova refiled with the City of Somerville last week, with changes. Major headlines are as follows:
- Reduction in total square footage from 1.9M to 1.6M sqft.
- Building heights reduced from 9 to 14 stories (45 to 245 feet) to 6-9 stories (85 to 185 feet)
- New housing, with one building (in Block 4?) replaced with a 100 unit housing block, which will be 20% affordable.
- One building (Block 3) will have access provisioned for a future MBTA stop, as part of a "public room" atrium.
- Parking reduced from 1250 spaces to 748, 500 bike parking spaces.
View attachment 50518Somernova Files Scaled Back Zoning for Campus Expansion — SOMERNOVA - Co-creating the future
In December of 2023, Somernova proposed a 1.9 million SF campus expansion project, which was withdrawn in February 2024 after receiving feedback from the Somerville community and Union Square Neighborhood Council. We’ve engaged in extensive conversations and, as a result, made significant changes towww.somernova.community
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If you look closely, it seems like they drew it as a Commuter Rail stop, but if this ever happens it will be Green Line.A future MBTA stop? Maybe wishful thinking of "build it and they will cone", but I always love seeing the zeal of including features of future transit extension proposals in renderings. We'll see
Rafi’s refiled plan removed 40 percent of the parking spaces from the original and would make Somernova “transit ready” to connect to a MBTA train stop that it would build. It notes there is already campus access via 83 and 87 buses, as well as having two T stops within walking distance; the neighborhood council says the site is not well served by public transportation and already has issues with gridlock.