pixelsand8
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view from Monsignor O'Brien overpass
Curious to know how thick those walls are. Old cold storage buildings like this tend to have some of the thickest walls known to man and are quite expensive to cut openings into.
Berkeley Investments started construction on a $10.5 M, 34-unit apartment building at 625 McGrath Highway in Somerville. Paving the way for the project, it recently closed on its $2.25M purchase of the former Highland Auto Parts store site. Berkeley's three-level, townhouse-style project will have studios, one-bedroom and two-bedroom units in sizes from 650 SF to-1,100 SF and will be priced between $2.40 SF/and $2.90/SF per month.
Do you recall what the 'quirky' building was used for?
I've biked through there hundreds of times, yet somehow never noticed it until it was suddenly gone.
Hmm. Half the lot will be surface parking. The other half will be, wait for it, a Colonial. More accurately a Dullonial. Way to go Somerville.
A colonial would be the most impressive architectural contribution to that intersection in the past 100 years. And as for the surface parking? Excellent opportunity for an outdoor patio once the driverless car revolution obliterates yuppie car ownership. Next stop 2040! http://www.theatlanticcities.com/commute/2014/04/practical-path-driverless-cars/8759/
Plans proposed for pit in Somerville's Teele Square
By Monica Jimenez
mjimenez@wickedlocal.com
Posted Apr. 16, 2014 @ 2:40 pm
SOMERVILLE
Teele Square’s giant pit may soon be filled.
The eyesore at 1154 Broadway, empty since a fire destroyed the commercial complex on site in October 2011, would be replaced by a four-story building with commercial and residential space, according to design plans filed at City Hall.
Neighbors are invited to a community meeting May 1 at 6:30 p.m. at the West Somerville Neighborhood School to become acquainted with the proposed project, said Ward 7 Alderman Katjana Ballantyne.
"From the comments I have gotten, people feel it’s been a long time and they want to see something there," Ballantyne said. "Especially the neighbors going back a number of blocks around them, they want to see foot traffic, they want to see vitality in the square."
Alderman At Large Mary Jo Rossetti, who lives in Teele Square, said the same.
"I think it’s been vacant for far too long," Rossetti said. "It’s our local swimming hole that’s not being used as a swimming hole, and it needs attention."
Ballantyne and Rossetti said they don’t know very much yet about the proposal under consideration by the Somerville Design Review Committee. Chris Griffin of Griffin Properties, which the listing agent for the site, said he could not discuss plans because he was bound by a confidentiality agreement between the site’s buyer and seller. The site’s current owner is Robert Casey, who took over the trust managing the site from the previous owner, Frank Sartori, after the fire.
According to a plan by Peter Quinn Architects the building would have 7,000 square feet of commercial space on the ground floor and three residential levels above. There would be an underground parking level for 21 cars, accessible by a two-way ramp and an elevator leading up to a plaza serving both residents and businesses, possibly with an adjacent seasonal kiosk.
The commercial level would have plaza and street entries as well as a residential elevator in the lobby, according to the plan. The residential levels would include 10 two-bedroom units ranging from 1,080 to 1,130 square feet and one 1,500-square-foot three-bedroom penthouse, all with balconies. The 40-to-45-foot-tall building would be angled according to the line of the street, would include a step back at the rear where it meets the neighborhood, and would incorporate trees, according to the plan.
The prominent Teele Square site has been nothing but a fenced-off pit since October 2011, when a three-alarm fire gutted the building that stood there. The building was formerly home to Hawk Cleaners and Nail Image, as well as the West Somerville police substation, Maria’s Italian Cold Cuts and Asian restaurant Kee Kar Lau.
Ballantyne said people in her ward feel it’s about time something happened at that site.
"It has been demoralizing for the community. They have been saddened," Ballantyne said. "They want to see something there."