![Judy Pagliuca before the Back Bay Architecural Commission](https://universalhub.com/files/styles/main_image_-_bigger/public/images/2020/pagliuca.jpg)
Judy Pagliuca makes a point to commission members.
Judy and Steve Pagliuca hit .500 before the Back Bay Architectural Commission Wednesday night: The board gave them permission to add an addition that would house a two-car garage and a deck in the rear of their house at 362 Marlborough St., but rejected a similar request for a smaller house they also own at 352 Marlborough.
The City Hall hearings on the two proposals turned into a contentious debate on the future of a historic neighborhood where even exterior changes visible only from its numerous service alleys - and the removal of trees - require commission approval.
In a 6-3 vote, the commission gave the couple - yes, he's the Bain Capital/Boston Celtics/Boston 2024 Steve Pagliuca - permission to nestle the garage next to a small extension, or "ell" in the rear of 362 Marlborough and put a deck atop it. The deck will be screened with shrubs so nobody walking by might be offended by the sight of deck furniture, should they somehow be able to see over a brick privacy wall along Hereford Street or look into the property from the alley behind their house.
And the couple - Judy Pagliuca attended the hearings, her husband did not - can tear down a tree in the rear of their property to make way for a city-mandated water "recharge" system to pump rainwater back into the ground and excavate a sloping ramp from the alley down to the garage. The Pagliucas will plant a new tree to replace the old one and an additional one in the front.
Commission Chairwoman Kathleen Connor said she found the garage and deck "extremely respectful" of the existing building. Although the couple would cut into the facade of the ell to build the garage, the commission decided that was OK in part because the ell was built as an addition - in 1912 - and so is not as historically important as the rest of the building.
But opponents said the commission, to which Mayor Walsh recently appointed several new members, is setting a dangerous precedent that will let lots of residents get permission to carve out their own garages and tear down trees in what they said would mean a blow to the neighborhood's historic nature - the suburbanization of this most urbane of urban neighborhoods.
Sherry Robinson of Hereford Street objected to the shrubs around the deck. "I don't really want to look at a hedge row," because that's something you only find in suburbs. What she wants, she said, a tree.
"This is a suburban makeover," with the garage door becoming "the main feature of this house on a public way," Shirley Kressel of Hereford Street said.
Both the Neighborhood Association of the Back Bay and the Garden Club of the Back Bay opposed the Pagliuca request, questioning both the change to the building and the need to remove the tree.
Jackie Blombach, co-president of the garden club, wondered, if Boston is such a walkable city, "why, then, are we building more garages?"
A NABB member said that in 64 decisions going back 30 years, the commission had never approved a new garage.
Peter Der Manuelian, who lives on Marlboro Street, and who prefaced his remarks by saying he teaches at Harvard, said a commission vote for the Pagliucas would start "an unprecedented and radical transformation" of the neighborhood as less historically respectful residents rushed to add on walk-out decks and the like, and leaving the neighborhood subject to "the whims of money, of political influence and power."
For decades, he told commission members, "It's been your job to say no, and the neighborhood has been for the better."
The proposal had its supporters.
Ian Reynolds of Marlborough Street said that while he loves the historic nature of the Back Bay, he also appreciates people willing to invest in their homes. "The garage doesn't stick out," he said.
Laura Martin of Commonwealth Avenue, who announced she is a Millennial, said she sees nothing wrong with a homeowner wanted to protect their cars and other belongings in a garage, both from the elements and from car thieves and burglars.
Joe Pagliuca - Steve and Judy's son - said it's now "a complete hassle" for him to deal with getting his car out of an alley, after avoiding all the glass, just to bring his two-year-old daughter up to Ipswich for a day at the beach.
Judy Pagliuca, accompanied by a zoning lawyer, architects, an arborist and a project manager, did not sit silently. She said she wants to beautify the alley, that she loves trees, too, and that the garage "is not a suburban garage, a big thing hanging off the house." She said she be happy to work with the garden club on determining the best trees to plant at the two houses.
And maybe, she said, it's time for the Back Bay Architectural Commission to add a new goal to its charter: Increasing "social cohesion" by maybe giving homeowners an easier way to add units that would let more people live in the Back Bay, rather than just the extremely well off. However, neither of her proposals called for affordable housing.
The board rejected the Pagliuca proposal for 352 Marlborough Street because, unlike at 362, creating the garage would involve cutting through the building's original facade.
362 Marlborough proposal, showing sloping ramp from alley to garage topped by shrub-lined deck:
![Pagliuca proposal](http://www.universalhub.com/images/2016/pagliuca-house.jpg)
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Comments
You'd be surprised
By Stevil
Thu, 06/09/2016 - 10:17pm
I rarely drive, but use the back entrance. Know most of my neighbors (including one in that lead picture). I'd say i say hello or chat with a neighbor in the alley 2-3 times a week. Sometimes a brief hello and sometimes we'll chat for 30-40 minutes depending on who it is. I'd say I see my neighbors on the alley at least as often as I see them on Comm Ave or Newbury. Alley "life" is actually critical in many ways from simple logistics to utilities to social life.
Historic preservation?
By Will LaTulippe
Thu, 06/09/2016 - 10:00am
Well, if you want that, how about we bulldoze everybody's house and make it a swamp again?
"I don't want to look at shrubs." Well, then look in another direction. What are you, a fish? You have a 360 degree field of vision. Use it. I haven't an iota of sympathy for anybody who lives in Back Bay.
I want to produce a reality show where a bunch of hood folks move in to a place on Marlborough, and the neighbors have to grit their teeth and pretend that they're okay with it.
obtuse comment
By anon
Thu, 06/09/2016 - 10:27am
It's historic building preservation... face-palm. No one is forcing the rich to move to or live in historic neighborhoods with strict regulations. Is it really rocket science to do your research before buying multiple million dollar properties?
Your usage of the word
By tcf098
Thu, 06/09/2016 - 12:34pm
Your usage of the word "obtuse" here pleases me.
You're making my point
By Will LaTulippe
Thu, 06/09/2016 - 1:55pm
Why bully a guy over shrubs and a parking garage? Get a life.
It's a slippery slope. First
By tofu
Thu, 06/09/2016 - 9:57pm
It's a slippery slope. First it's shrubs and a garage, then someone asks "we didn't bully that guy, why bully someone who wants to build a mermaid fountain?"
A lot of people here speaking
By anon poster
Thu, 06/09/2016 - 10:26am
A lot of people here speaking out in favor of zoning enforcement complain about the same laws when a big developer wants to put in a huge apartment or condo building with prices out of reach of most residents to make a quick profit. Those buildings don't much to reduce housing costs.
Zoning is a good thing in general.
Look on the face
By anon
Thu, 06/09/2016 - 11:14am
The look on the face of the female commission member on the left is absolutely priceless. It says it all.
I don't see a problem here
By anon
Thu, 06/09/2016 - 12:04pm
The addition of the garage underneath the existing bump out is done quite nicely and doesn't appear to affect any sightlines. It also doesn't change the overall footprint much except on the street side where there is no neighbor to complain about zoning.
If I had the means I would have done the same thing. Great return on investment in the long run.
Anybody else game for leaving
By tcf098
Thu, 06/09/2016 - 12:27pm
Anybody else game for leaving empty glass bottles in front of his garage?
What's next, his own personal access ramp to I-90 so that he doesn't have to deal with the scourge of commoner traffic?
When you consider yourself
By anon
Thu, 06/09/2016 - 12:36pm
When you consider yourself above the rules and regulations The Lowly Commoners abide by then of course your wouldn't want to mix with the little working people on the Pike when your driver brings you to Mumsy's and Dada's in Weston. Mumsy, Dada! I don't like parking my car in one of the most expensive alleyways in Boston. I want a garage! Build it for me! Cut down those trees! Off with their heads!
Back in the 1870s when the
By anon
Thu, 06/09/2016 - 12:35pm
Back in the 1870s when the Back Bay row houses were built, what was in the alleys?
Residents definitely didn't store their horses and carriages outdoors in all weather, like so many people do today with cars.
Were some of the stables and carriage houses in the alleys? Or were they all in dedicated buildings on Newbury between Mass Ave and Hereford as http://goodoldboston.blogspot.com/2012/03/back-bay... says, and your driver would have to bring the carriage around when you needed it?
Strict zoning is nothing new
By chaosjake
Thu, 06/09/2016 - 4:46pm
Strict zoning is nothing new to the Back Bay. From the original 1848 legislative act authorizing the fill onward, it has been one of the most restrictive neighborhoods in Boston. Keeping horse and carriage at home was prohibited on practically every residential street in the Back Bay. There were exceptions for hotels (like the Vendome) and clubs (like the Algonquin), but any homeowner who wanted a carriage house at home had to get the 19th century equivalent of a variance.
Some were granted, as evidenced by the rather attractive barrel vaulted carriage house in alley 435 between Clarendon and Dartmouth. (I haven't actually researched when it was built, but it looks 19th century.)
To answer my own question,
By anon
Thu, 06/09/2016 - 12:41pm
To answer my own question, https://google.com/search?q=site%3Abackbayhouses.o... shows lots of stables in the alleys. It was very common for stables to be converted to garages, and wealthy residents of Back Bay were more likely than the average person to be early adopters of cars.
So? Get a horse if you want a
By anon
Thu, 06/09/2016 - 2:41pm
So? Get a horse if you want a stable attached to your 19th century urban brick condo. Oh wait... it's 2016. Cars have been surviving for years outside in the rain and snow, I promise you.
I would be thrilled to use a
By anon
Fri, 06/10/2016 - 10:57am
I would be thrilled to use a horse for my daily transportation in a 19th century neighhhhborhood. But it's not going to happen.
People can sleep outside as
By anon
Fri, 06/10/2016 - 10:58am
People can sleep outside as well. But that doesn't mean houses should be illegal.
Thanks for the link backbayhouses.org
By downtown-anon
Fri, 06/10/2016 - 3:14pm
Unbelievable amount of information.
Will the garage have a fridge
By bulgingbuick
Thu, 06/09/2016 - 4:02pm
for the Grey Poupon?
The Globe is right on this
By anon
Fri, 06/10/2016 - 6:43am
this morning, after reading UHub's report. They admit they werent there, as Uhub apparently was, but they dont admit that the only reason they're reporting on this is because Uhub broke the story.
https://www.bostonglobe.com/business/2016/06/09/pa...
Great job Adam!
Thanks!
By adamg
Fri, 06/10/2016 - 9:45am
I have to admit, I don't normally attend the hearings of this commission (well, OK, I'd never attended a single one). So in turn, I have to thank the person who tipped me off to the fact the meeting would be interesting enough to go to.
Snow removal
By anon
Wed, 02/15/2017 - 10:22am
I find it funny that Joe Pagliuca has the nerve to say it's a complete hassle for him to deal with his car getting out of the alley go to the beach with his family, yet the entire winter the area in front of 362 Marlborough has never once been shoveled and been a danger to walk through after a snow storm.
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