Fitch Bronson
New member
- Joined
- Oct 11, 2023
- Messages
- 10
- Reaction score
- 28
84,000 dwelling units needed statewide. Multiple communities across southern Maine turning down proposed developments that would help alleviate the housing crisis (800 units in Kittery DOA last year, 321 units in Saco DOA recently, the 107 unit Cumberland senior housing project killed when the Planning Board punted and sent the project to the Select Board).
Yet here we have a central York County community with *millions* of square feet of developable, walkable square footage via adaptive reuse of the mills. Vast tracts of developable land proximate to a small urban core. And a recent, major infusion of DOT dollars to completely redo the streetscape of that urban core. And yet, capital sits on the sidelines rather than moving toward opportunity. Yes, the transportation infrastructure to get out there is less than ideal absent a Gorham Connector-style limited access highway getting pushed through. Yes, interest rates and construction costs are high. But when will a champion emerge from the private sector who sees what others don't yet see, who's bullish on Sanford and willing to put skin in the game? From their own economic development director:
Yet here we have a central York County community with *millions* of square feet of developable, walkable square footage via adaptive reuse of the mills. Vast tracts of developable land proximate to a small urban core. And a recent, major infusion of DOT dollars to completely redo the streetscape of that urban core. And yet, capital sits on the sidelines rather than moving toward opportunity. Yes, the transportation infrastructure to get out there is less than ideal absent a Gorham Connector-style limited access highway getting pushed through. Yes, interest rates and construction costs are high. But when will a champion emerge from the private sector who sees what others don't yet see, who's bullish on Sanford and willing to put skin in the game? From their own economic development director: