MjolnirMan
Active Member
- Joined
- Jan 18, 2016
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85 affordable units isn't nothing, especially if you're basically building them on an empty lot. But the potential at this site is what's killing me. The radian has 240 units (and 70 parking spaces), meaning you could plop one of those there and add an additional 155 units. Even if the additional units were all market rate (2/3rds of the building), that would be a net gain of housing where it's badly needed.
NEI's affordable housing contracting also left a lot to be desired at 88 Hudson. See the last few pages of the One Greenway thread for a taste of the disgust at the design and materials - and they've also had lots of ongoing quality control issues like window and roof leaks since day 1. One benefit of a mixed development like 99 Kneeland/66 Hudson is that the affordable tenants get the same fixtures as the market-rates.
NEI's affordable housing contracting also left a lot to be desired at 88 Hudson. See the last few pages of the One Greenway thread for a taste of the disgust at the design and materials - and they've also had lots of ongoing quality control issues like window and roof leaks since day 1. One benefit of a mixed development like 99 Kneeland/66 Hudson is that the affordable tenants get the same fixtures as the market-rates.