RandomWalk
Senior Member
- Joined
- Feb 2, 2014
- Messages
- 3,032
- Reaction score
- 4,278
That’s better than the hybrid approach with self storage. However, shoving all the affordable units into large blocks is very NIMBY.
A lot of low-income families with kids will be crammed into that large building on a small lot. I hope a playground is established near by for the kids. There is one on the other end of Danehy Park, quite a long way from there.Another cookie-cutter housing dump on New Street. At least it's 100% affordable. JAS are the good guys.
52 New Street - CDD - City of Cambridge, Massachusetts
Just A Start (JAS) is proposing the new construction of 106 units of affordable housing on an underutilized parcel immediately adjacent to Danehy Park in North Cambridge.www.cambridgema.gov
View attachment 17962
But it makes the NIMBYS in nearby Belmont feel good about themselves soA lot of low-income families with kids will be crammed into that large building on a small lot. I hope a playground is established near by for the kids. There is one on the other end of Danehy Park, quite a long way from there.
Wow, the lower left corner of that render is exactly where I grew up, from 1955 to 1967. However, there was at least twice the amount of open space in the old Jefferson Park "projects" compared to this new development. I don't like the idea of cramming all low-income people into a massive high-density development like this. A mix of market rate and low income units would be healthier for society at large and for the people there. When is this country ever going to learn that cramming all the poor people off into a high density, isolated development is a bad idea? Crime, gangs, drugs, guns; it will all happen here. I know because I lived here, and this will be worse. Seeing this kind of breaks my heart, really.Full rebuild coming for CHA Jefferson Park:
View attachment 18222
Wow, the lower left corner of that render is exactly where I grew up, from 1955 to 1967. However, there was at least twice the amount of open space in the old Jefferson Park "projects" compared to this new development. I don't like the idea of cramming all low-income people into a massive high-density development like this. A mix of market rate and low income units would be healthier for society at large and for the people there. When is this country ever going to learn that cramming all the poor people off into a high density, isolated development is a bad idea? Crime, gangs, drugs, guns; it will all happen here. I know because I lived here, and this will be worse. Seeing this kind of breaks my heart, really.
Cramming poor families on top of one another with minimal outdoor space is different than cramming upper income people. The lower income families generally have children more than the upper income people, and they have more challenges and problems in life. They have fewer resources and opportunities to do things away from their apartment. When I lived in Jefferson Park in the 1950s, it wasn't fun, and that layout then was way less dense than this proposal. There were several playgrounds and a lot of open space in the old Jefferson Park there that I lived in. A lot of that will be gone with this new development. This proposal horrifies me, to say the least. It will really have an impact on North Cambridge with increased crime, shootings, drugs, etc.Is this kind of density that different from what the high-income people are getting down the street on CambridgePark Drive, though? I get the argument for multi-income housing.
A lot of low-income families with kids will be crammed into that large building on a small lot. I hope a playground is established near by for the kids. There is one on the other end of Danehy Park, quite a long way from there.
It's insane how there's no footbridge from the ever increasingly dense developments south of the Fitchburg Line to the MBTA Alewife Station on the north. The whole area north and south of the Fitchburg Line looks like an unplanned mishmash of density being thrown up quickly with no amenities such as pocket parks, pedestrian/ bike trails, or even a logical street system. And a few areas of reclaimed wetlands would have been nice for stormwater control and aesthetics. Of course that would have cut into the cheek-to-jowl cramming in of buildings on every squares foot of the area.
At the location of the proposed blue and white building in the lower left corner of this render is exactly where I lived from 1954 to 1967 (door 35 in the old "projects"). Had a lot of good times in the area.