Intermed has a parking garage and is ten floors high.
The Intermed project spent half a year driving deep piles on the site. If your tenant is a medical office with premium rents, yeah, it's financially feasible (or rather, it was back in 2007). But if you want to build apartments in 2022, it's going to be a lot harder to make those costs pencil out.
The original Federated proposal was for four 15 story buildings. The developer was going to put up relatively cheap towers, and so wouldn't they have investigated the circumstances with weak soils?
And ultimately, Federated couldn't build those 15-story buildings – after 2 years they pared their proposal down to 6-story wood-framed landscrapers (albeit with an even taller parking garage). This was framed as a "legal settlement" to satisfy Peter Monro's narcissistic lawsuit, but lots of other economic factors were in play. Blaming it on Monro let Federated and the city soothe the plaintiffs' bloated egos, it gave housing advocates an anti-housing straw man straight out of central casting – look at this twit from the West End who doesn't like apartment buildings! – which also gave the city a mandate to do ambitious zoning reforms to end-run around that kind of toxic NIMBYism, and it gave Federated an excuse to pivot to a smaller, more economically viable project with cheaper materials.
The 125' zoning is still in place for these lots, and people like Monro (if there's anyone out there who's shitty enough to want to emulate his behavior) no longer have any standing to challenge it in court, since it's been on the books for over a decade now. Nothing prevents Federated from selling the land to a new developer and letting them build something unencumbered by the 2014 settlement. Rents have gone up considerably higher, and on paper the land is much more valuable.
But bear in mind that, back in the 2000s and early 2010s, this area of Bayside (where Intermed was built, and where the Federated project was proposed) contained basically the only empty lots in the entire city where high-density mixed-use was legal under the city's zoning code. In 2012, there were just two 5+ unit multifamily buildings completed in the entire city, and both were low-income infill housing: Elm Terrace on High St. and Oak St. Lofts in the Arts District, for a combined 75 units. So Federated's 600-apartment proposal was based, in part, on the fact that they were poised to be the only show in town for a lot of market-rate renters or condo buyers.
In the years since then, though, City Hall has liberalized the zoning code to allow taller buildings with less (or no) parking in many, many more parts of the city – which made these Bayside parcels less unique, and thus less valuable. This year alone, between 201 Federal, Hanover St., Avesta's Valley St. project, PHA's Front St. project, CHOM's Middle Street project, the small project on Danforth St., and several others, we've got about 600 multifamily units under construction in the city – as many as Federated had proposed building over the course of several years in their original proposal.