JeffDowntown
Senior Member
- Joined
- May 28, 2007
- Messages
- 4,601
- Reaction score
- 3,259
I think you are misunderstanding the linkage impact here to affordable housing.This seems like a huge improvement with respect to the massing. However, I hope that the city pushes back a bit and requires Millennium to eventually construct the 60 units that were eliminated as off-site affordable units at some point in the not-too-distant future.
The 60 units being eliminated were market rate units. There are no affordable units on site with this development. Additionally, the remaining market rate units are being downgraded in value by shifting from condo to apartment.
The affordable units being impacted are at the Parcel-P12C development on the edge of Chinatown:
Parcel P-12 | 286-290 Tremont St | Chinatown
From what I gather, the Boston Arts Academy is planning on building a school on parcel-12, the parking lot adjacent to the old Don Bosco parking lot running between Washington and Tremont Streets. Here is an excerpt from a May 2008 entry to the Boston Chinatown Blog: Word on the street is...
archboston.com
http://www.bostonplans.org/projects/development-projects/290-tremont-street-(parcel-p-12c)
This development is largely financed by the affordable linkage contribution from Winthrop Place. But the value of the market rate housing at Winthrop Place is dropping, so by definition the affordable linkage funding also drops. This puts the Parcel-P12C project in severe jeopardy for financing.
Last edited: