
Architect's rendering (new building on left).
A developer that has already put up three new buildings along Tremont Street on Mission Hill has filed plans with the BPDA for a fourth - a 31-unit residential building at 9 Burney St., just off Tremont.
New Urban Partners says its proposed building would also include ground-floor restaurant space and a parklet or "laneway" open to the public. The company says it is talking to local artists about possibly using the space for public displays.
Four of the units would be designated affordable.
The building would have just six parking spaces - due to its location near the Roxbury Crossing and Brigham Circle T stops.
In addition to five floors visible from the street, the building would have a recessed sixth-floor penthouse.
In its application, New Urban Partners explains the design:
Historically, Tremont Street has been an architectural line of demarcation between Boston's brick masonry buildings and its wood framed "streetcar" neighborhoods. Brick tends to be the material of the buildings along Tremont Street while the wood-framed buildings tend to populate the ladder streets which branch off from Tremont Street. In response to our specific local condition, we are proposing a two-part design with the brick on the facades that are most visible to Burney Street and the Laneway sides of the building and a lighter panelized facade system on the sides of the building which are most proximate to the nearby wood-clad buildings. The decision to use brick is specifically intended to elevate the overall material quality of the facades while signifying the retail uses on our ground floor and to continue the tradition of brick that is found throughout the structures on Delle Avenue just to the south of the site. The detailing on these facades will pick up on the nuances, depth, and shadow play of the historic buildings nearby. At the ground level retail and lobby, the building will have a more transparent base appropriate for those more public uses. Above the base on Burney Street and over the Laneway we are proposing Juliet balconies which will serve to activate the outdoor spaces around the building and encourage more life on the street.
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Comments
YIMBY
By SharpWave
Mon, 01/08/2018 - 11:06pm
Build build build! More housing capacity can only be good for the city.
Who's housing?
By Toneye
Tue, 01/09/2018 - 5:49am
I guess you haven't seen the rents for the other 3 buildings he's built. Housing for who?
Well, per the article
By Parkwayne
Tue, 01/09/2018 - 7:03am
This would include four affordable units which is at worst one more than what the triple decker being replaced.
That neighborhood has a very large block of affordable housing just to the north of this location.
Housing for people who can
By anon
Tue, 01/09/2018 - 7:12am
Housing for people who can afford it, that's who. Affordable housing doesn't mean subsidized housing.
No, that's not what it means
By adamg
Tue, 01/09/2018 - 7:36am
The owner has to rent the apartments (or sell the condos) at reduced prices that somebody making no more than X percent of the area median income (70 or 80%, I think) could afford. Whether that is enough is another question, but, yes, the units cost the renter/buyer less. There's typically a lottery for them.
It's almost likeo
By Ari O
Tue, 01/09/2018 - 9:36am
Building more supply decreases price. But that economics just doesn't work in the housing market, right?
Unfortunately...
By BlackKat
Tue, 01/09/2018 - 10:41am
It doesn't typically work in THIS housing market due to an insatiable demand that can never be sated.
4 affordable units?
By Parkwayne
Tue, 01/09/2018 - 11:11am
I mean again, this is one more affordable unit that already exists there, isn't it?
So your solution is to stop
By anon
Tue, 01/09/2018 - 11:49am
So your solution is to stop eating and let the insatiable hunger continue to get worse?
citations needed
By anon
Tue, 01/09/2018 - 12:07pm
One was provided for you. Please return the favor by documenting this "insatiable demand" that you speak of.
Show Me
By BlackKat
Tue, 01/09/2018 - 1:36pm
The 1 bedroom unit you can buy in the city for $100K [what they should be going for if the housing prices rose from 1998 - present consistent with inflation] with no income restrictions?
That's not how the free
By anon
Tue, 01/09/2018 - 2:14pm
That's not how the free market works.
Regulated Max Price Increases Are The Solution For All Products
By BlackKat
Tue, 01/09/2018 - 5:35pm
The Free Market runs much better with a boot to its neck.
Isn't that socialism?
By anon
Wed, 01/10/2018 - 8:52am
Isn't that socialism?
housing
By John-W
Tue, 01/09/2018 - 12:37pm
Let me guess, we just need to wait for the housing to "trickle down," right?
YIMBY = yuppie in my backyard
By anon
Tue, 01/09/2018 - 7:01am
YIMBY = yuppie in my backyard
So true!
By Lmo
Tue, 01/09/2018 - 10:17am
So true!
ugh
By johnmcboston
Tue, 01/09/2018 - 8:48am
Yea housing, but does it have to be yet another boring cube?
Build your own grand vision
By anon
Tue, 01/09/2018 - 9:47am
Market rate or affordable - design your own building, develop it, etc.
Canyonero Estates?
I hate most of the new stuff but..
By bshep
Tue, 01/09/2018 - 11:16am
.. I kind of like this one! At least from that pic, it seems to fit in and doesn't scream "thrown up in a hurry and without much thought, c. mid-2010s".
uhm..
By John-W
Tue, 01/09/2018 - 12:39pm
slight edit: "throw up in a hurry" and yes, it's screaming it. #crapitechture
Maybe
By bgl
Tue, 01/09/2018 - 9:41pm
Compared to most of the prefab facade infill, at least this looks like it has nice brick work from the renders I have seen. That said - it will all depend on how it turns out. If its real brick it will be a step above most of the crap going up.
At least it's not just a cube
By anon
Tue, 01/09/2018 - 12:04pm
At least it's not just a cube covered in cheap paneling. the brick looks nice.
They did a nice job on the other buildings
By Gary C
Tue, 01/09/2018 - 10:10am
I have been impressed with the look of the buildings that have gone up around there on Tremont. More of the same is a big improvement.
This actually looks like a
By anon
Tue, 01/09/2018 - 10:12am
This actually looks like a nice new building that's both modern and classic enough to fit in with the existing brick structures. Boston needs thousands of new buildings like this!
Only 4 "affordable" units?
By anon
Tue, 01/09/2018 - 11:28am
Only 4 "affordable" units? Also, anyone lucky enough to move into these are usually harrased to no end by the building owners to keep the number of "undesirables" out, so they have to move regardless.
Build it!
By Jason
Tue, 01/09/2018 - 11:41am
I used to live about 100 yards from there. That's the ideal place for this kind of project and they've done a good job making sure it will fit in to the neighborhood. That neighborhood is amazingly walkable and one has great transit. Hope the developers get through the review process with a minimum of NIMBY complaints.
4 out of 31? 6 parking spots?
By Delle Ave Kid
Fri, 01/26/2018 - 11:52am
Sorry bout the double posts.
The design is ugly. The number of "affordable" units is unacceptably low. The parking designation is ridiculous. A little more realistic please.
- Lived on Delle Av since 1979.
let's try that again
By Delle Ave Kid
Sat, 01/20/2018 - 6:34pm
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