East Boston Chamber of Commerce Brian Golden presentation 10 24-16
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Transcript of East Boston Chamber of Commerce Brian Golden presentation 10 24-16
East Boston Chamber of CommerceBrian P. Golden, Director, Boston Planning & Development AgencyOctober 25, 2016
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Boston Planning & Development Agency
Citywide Development Update
East Boston Development Update
Planning Update
01.Boston Planning & Development Agency
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Shaping the future of Boston together.
The BPDA plans and guides inclusive growth in our city —creating opportunities for everyone to live, work and connect.
Through our future-focused, city-wide lens, we engage communities, implement new solutions, partner for greater impact and track progress.
Organizational Identity
Our MissionOur Vision
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Key Recommendations
Areas of Focus
Engage Communities
Implement New Solutions
Partner For Greater Impact
Track Progress
We will develop new ways to encourage a
broader, more representative community to
participate in what we do in new ways that are natural and convenient
for them.
We will tap into Boston’s innovative spirit and look for ‘arc of the
frontier’ ideas, locally and globally, that are
successfully addressing inclusivity. We will pilot
them in neighborhoods.
We will seek, identify, and execute efforts that can be amplified through
partnership, and work with our partners to make the greatest
impact on inclusivity.
We will track progress, results, and impact
toward inclusivity to build credibility and
confidence. We will use rigorous measures, modern tools, and effective, engaging
communication.
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Article 80 Development Review
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Article 80 Community Process
Impact Advisory Group (IAG) is formed for most Large Projects to assist with identifying potential impacts and mitigation
IAG meetings are held throughout the review process
Community Meetings are held
Simultaneous interpretation is available upon request in advance of a community meeting
Sign up for email notification of meetings (and newsletters, research publications, etc.) though the BPDA’s website: http://www.bostonredevelopmentauthority.org/about-us/get-involved
Public Meeting Notices appear in East Boston Times (notices are bilingual)
Public Comment Period
Projects have a minimum 30 day public comment period
Abutters meetings and Civic Group Meetings are also held throughout the review process
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Engage Communities One of the four areas of focus with the BPDA’s new mission and vision
To shape an inclusive Boston, we will engage a broader and more representative community–the people, businesses and communities of Boston as well as its own employees
We will create a redesigned community meeting format to provide more context and more clarity, and an online platform for neighborhood-specific updates and feedback
This will ensure that conversations are open, ongoing, and available to all
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New Monthly Meeting The Department of Neighborhood Development, East Boston Main Streets and
the Mayor’s Office of Neighborhood Services will host a monthly meeting to ensure that the business community is aware of new development proposals
Developers will be presenting at these meetings
The first meeting is tonight, 6:30 - 8:30PM at the East Boston Social Center, 68 Central Square
02.Citywide Development Update
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Development Context
Source: BPDA Project Pipeline, BPDA Research Division Analysis.
2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 YTD0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
18
8.5
16.3
11.9
8.0
12.4
Total SF Approved in the City of Boston (Millions)
Mill
ions
of S
F
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Development Context
Source: BPDA Project Pipeline, BPDA Research Division Analysis.
Allston/BrightonBack Bay
Bay VillageBeacon Hill
CharlestownChinatownDorchesterDowntown
East BostonFenway
Hyde ParkJamaica Plain
Longwood Medical AreaMattapan
Mission HillNorth EndRoslindale
RoxburySouth Boston
South Boston WaterfrontSouth EndWest End
West Roxbury
- 500 1,000 1,500 2,000 2,500 3,000 3,500 4,000 4,500 5,000 3,435
1,406 -
71 537
508 1,967
4,608 3,045
2,403 1,125
1,552 136 152
428 -
182 1,465
2,756 4,225
1,842 700
366
Residential Units Approved by BPDA Board, 2009 to October 2016
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East Boston ComparisonApproved from January 2014 to October 2016Row Labels Total Retail S.F. Total S.F. Total # of Residential Unit Total # of Affordable Unit All Other S.F.Allston 13,162 1,638,666 896 42 1,625,504 Back Bay 31,129 681,878 31 76 650,749 Beacon Hill - 119,000 71 11 119,000 Brighton 82,649 2,233,591 1,197 193 2,150,942 Charlestown 13,533 1,737,897 323 36 1,724,364 Chinatown 3,826 96,935 113 112 93,109 Dorchester 243,898 2,364,643 1,351 401 2,120,745 Downtown 57,750 2,720,835 911 72 2,663,085 East Boston 44,200 2,441,526 2,199 605 2,397,326 Fenway 390,500 2,296,560 657 95 1,906,060 Hyde Park - 497,874 59 28 497,874 Jamaica Plain 41,935 1,077,460 768 236 1,035,525 Mattapan 53,000 - - 53,000 Mission Hill 22,978 617,214 282 117 594,236 North End 25,000 145,000 - - 120,000 Roslindale 995 39,563 35 2 38,568 Roxbury 12,940 1,171,618 661 299 1,158,678 South Boston 144,355 2,702,543 1,475 250 2,558,188 South Boston Waterfront 394,910 6,586,789 2,973 165 6,191,879 South End 65,060 1,430,039 932 93 1,364,979 West End 7,000 1,148,780 700 65 1,141,780 West Roxbury 900 542,303 228 26 541,403 Grand Total 1,596,720 32,343,714 15,862 2,924 30,746,994
Source: BPDA Project Pipeline, BPDA Research Division Analysis.
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East Boston Comparison
South Boston W
aterfront
East Bosto
n
Allston/B
righton
South Boston
Dorcheste
r
Jamaica Plain and M
ission Hill
Downtown (incl.
Chinatown)
South End
North and W
est Ends
Roxbury
Fenway
Charlesto
wn
West Roxb
ury
Back Bay/B
eacon Hill
Hyde Park
Roslindale
Mattapan0
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
2,500
3,000
3,500
Housing Units Approved, 2014 – Oct. 2016
Regular Units Affordable Units
Large proportion of Approved housing units are affordable.
Source: BPDA Project Pipeline, BPDA Research Division Analysis.
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East Boston Comparison
South Bosto
n Wate
rfront
Allston/B
righton
Downtown (incl.
Chinatown)
South Bosto
n
East B
oston
Dorchest
er
Fenway
Charlest
own
Jamaic
a Plai
n and M
ission Hill
South En
d
North an
d West
Ends
Roxbury
Back Bay
/Beac
on Hill
West Roxb
ury
Hyde P
ark
Mattap
an
Roslindale
-
1,000,000
2,000,000
3,000,000
4,000,000
5,000,000
6,000,000
7,000,000
Total SF Approved by Neighborhood, Retail vs. Other, 2014 – Oct. 2016
Other SF Retail SF
East Boston's total and retail square footage ap-provals are similar to comparable neighbor-hoods.
Source: BPDA Project Pipeline, BPDA Research Division Analysis.
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East Boston Comparison
South Bosto
n Wate
rfront
Fenway
Dorchest
er
South Bosto
n
Allston/B
righton
South En
d
Jamaic
a Plain
and M
ission Hill
Downtown (incl.
Chinatown)
East B
oston
North an
d West
Ends
Back Bay/
Beacon Hill
Charlest
own
Roxbury
Roslindale
West Roxb
ury
Hyde P
ark
Mattap
an -
50,000
100,000
150,000
200,000
250,000
300,000
350,000
400,000
450,000
Square Feet of Retail Space Approved, 2014 to Oct. 2016
Source: BPDA Project Pipeline, BPDA Research Division Analysis.
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Snapshot of Major Projects in Pipeline
Government Center Garage Redevelopment Fenway Center
380 Stuart Street
Washington Village
Harvard University - Science and Engineering Complex
Dot Block
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Snapshot of Major Projects Under Construction
The Hub on Causeway (Site of the former Boston Garden)
The Serenity (105A South Huntington Ave)
One Seaport Square
HBS Klarman HallOne Dalton
The Pierce
Copley Place South Bay Town Center
03.East Boston Development Update
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New Street (The Eddy) – Construction Complete $90 M 242,615 SF Approximately 259 units Inclusionary Development Policy Contribution of $7.8 M Up to 4,900 square feet of ground floor commercial space Redevelopment and revitalization of a 3.92-acre parcel that was not publicly
accessible for decades Creation of 42,667 SF (0.98 acres) of new public open space 500 linear feet of Harborwalk Connection of the Harborwalk to LoPresti Park An $80k contribution to the Parks Commission for LoPresti Park Construction of a water taxi landing and waiting area Protection of maritime uses
GEGC 2 New Street, LLC (Gerding Edlen)
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245 Sumner Street – Under Construction $8 M 42,435 SF 34 residential units
5 affordable units 2,257 SF of ground floor commercial
space Public realm enhancements include
widened public sidewalks along Sumner and Orleans Streets, which will feature new landscaping and street trees
Velkor Realty Trust
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248 Meridian Street – Under Construction $14 M 101,500+ SF Site of the former Seville Theater 66 condominiums
8 affordable units Two ground level floors will include 14,000
SF of retail and commercial uses Public realm enhancements include
streetscape improvements to the area, including new landscaping on Border Street
Global Property Developers Corporation, LLC
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East Pier Buildings 5 and 6 – Under Construction
Roseland Property Company
$120 M Approximately 290,000 SF 275 rental and condominium units
68 affordable rental units 11 affordable condominiums
Second phase of the Portside at East Pier Project First phase, Building 7 is complete Extended stay units, restaurant, health club and
other uses Public realm enhancements include open space,
and the extension of the Harborwalk New connection between the waterfront and the
East Boston Greenway
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Boston East – Under Construction
Trinity Border Street, LLC (Trinity Financial & East Boston CDC)
$80 M 420,000 SF Revitalization of 14.2 acres including water sheet that was
publicly inaccessible for years Up to 200 units
26 affordable units including 6 affordable artist units $18k Inclusionary Development Policy Contribution 8,700+ SF of Facilities of Public Accommodation including:
Art gallery/community room - available to community groups free of charge; rotating art exhibits and interactive programming
Historic exhibits on the EB maritime and archaeological history
Artist work/sell space Public access to the waterfront and extension of the
Harborwalk Built to suit marine facility that meets the required Designated
Port Area supported use
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Clippership Wharf – Under Construction
Noddle Island Limited Partnership
$225 M 745,800+ SF Up to 492 residential units
30 affordable units on-site $1.56 M contribution to Carlton Wharf (completed) Discounted land sale to Maverick Gardens (value of $1.5 M)
30,200 SF of retail and facilities of public accommodation including:
Small café, restaurant and outdoor seating area for the restaurant
Fitness center, lounge and club facility Approximately 190,696 SF (over 4 acres) of open space 1,381 linear feet of Harborwalk Two new docks to support transportation and recreational
uses, and other waterfront improvements
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Coppersmith Village – Board Approved
Neighborhood of Affordable Housing
$27.8 M 114,000 SF Revitalization of old industrial site 71 units in three new buildings
56 rental units (34 affordable) 15 homeownership units (3 affordable)
Approximately 3,000 SF of restaurant space Landscaping along Decatur Street to
enhance the pedestrian corridor to the waterfront
Community room on the ground floor with separate entrance outdoor terrace that will be available to residents and the surrounding community
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151 Porter Street – Board Approved
183 Orleans LLC (Affiliate of Heath Management Company)
$20 M 75,000 SF Adaptive reuse of an industrial building 127 room hotel New restaurant on the ground floor
and a café facing Orleans Street will help to activate the ground level
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301-303 Border Street – Under Review
City Realty Group, LLC
$21.6 M 75,000+ SF 980+ SF of commercial space 64 condominiums
8 affordable units $64k Inclusionary Development Policy
Contribution Art gallery Public realm enhancements will include:
Landscaping and pedestrian improvements Adopting and maintaining an underutilized
neighboring piece of open park land that will include adding wi-fi access, water access, greenery, and an ongoing maintenance plan, designed for the community to access and utilize
04.Planning Update
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The Imagine Boston 2030 Process
The Mayor’s Strategic Vision for Boston
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Imagine Boston Context
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How Did We Get Here?
To identify • Changes &
Challenges• Goals
This fall and spring, Imagine Boston 2030 talked to 10,000 residents across the city.
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This led to 12 Initiative Areas• Waterfront City• Green City• Connected City• Climate Ready City• Entrepreneurial City• Programmable City• Creative City• Expanded Neighborhoods• Thriving Downtown• Neighborhoods that are
Affordable• Economically Mobile Residents• Healthy Residents We are asking
residents for feedback on the initiative ideas
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Strategic Planning Areas 2015PLAN: JP/ROX • Washington Street between
Forest Hills at the Casey Overpass and Egleston Square and Columbus Avenue between Egleston Square and Jackson Square
PLAN: SOUTH BOSTON – DOT AVE• Dorchester Avenue Corridor
from Andrew Square to Broadway Station
Quarter Mile MBTA Radius
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Strategic Planning Areas 2016 PLAN: DUDLEY SQUARE ROXBURY • PLAN: Dudley Square Roxbury will revisit
the visions presented in both the Roxbury Strategic Master Plan and Dudley Vision to see if they still align with current community goals. Through open dialogue and community involvement, this study will be used to develop an implementation plan to mobilize development on publicly-owned parcels
PLAN: GLOVER’S CORNER, DORCHESTER • Stay tuned for more information
Our Vision
Shaping the future of Boston together.