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I don't know. The VA is struggling as an institution in general, and the fact that they put some money into making this building a little bit more palatable is at least a start. I can see how over the next, I don't know, 20 years, they might finish the job and rehab the whole complex. At least...I hope they do. Our veterans deserve better than what is there, and as ugly as the new job is, it is definitely better than what was there before.it went from ugly to ugly.
Yes, that is the JP VA.
It really is quite a dated place. They sorely need a new veterans hospital to be the crown of the Boston VA system.
The West Roxbury location on VFW Pkwy. is considerably nicer and has tons of lots of land for expansion into a super-campus. Unfortunately it's so long a bus ride from Forest Hills that the net loss of accessibility in combining locations would be devastating to patrons. If the Orange Line ever went out there it'd be about the same distance from a probable W. Roxbury stop behind the Shaw's as the JP location is a walk from Heath. But that's not an eventuality the VA can in any way plan for today, and the agency is so troubled at the federal level they haven't got the wherewithal to search for better digs downtown. For at least another generation they're probably stuck trying to make do best they possibly can with that underwhelming S. Huntington facility.
Also a large VA facility in Brockton on a huge parcel of land right off route 24
Bedford Veterans Affairs Medical Center, also known as the Edith Nourse Rogers Memorial Veterans Hospital, is a medical facility of the United States Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) at 200 Springs Road in Bedford, Massachusetts. Its campus once consisted of about 276 acres (112 ha) of land, which had by 2012 been reduced to 179 acres (72 ha). The hospital was opened in 1928 to treat neuropsychiatric patients, but now provides a wider array of medical services.......
In 2012, 177 acres of the remaining campus were listed as a historic district on the National Register of Historic Places.
The district includes the main hospital buildings, as well as residential housing, utility and maintenance buildings, most of which were built no later than 1947, and some of which date to 1928, the earliest period of the facility's construction. It is an excellent example of an intact Period 2 neuropsychiatric VA hospital.
If not pretty, at the very least, it's likely a thermal insulation upgrade from before. If I recall, they gut the facade completely and it would seem a lot of the slow work the past year or two has been its full reconstruction.