The BPDA board is urging the Zoning Board of Appeal to reject a proposed Amazon "last mile" distribution center off Dorchester Avenue in South Boston because it doesn't fit with a city vision of a Dorchester Avenue as a walkable district of largely residential buildings to replace the current stretch of low-rise commercial and industrial buildings between Broadway and Andrew Square.
Core Investments wants to rent a former Blue Cross/Blue Shield Warehouse and nearby land on Alger Street, near Damrell Street, for use as a warehouse and loading and torage area for its delivery vans.
The zoning board is scheduled to consider the proposal at a Nov. 17 hearing. The BPDA board yesterday urged the zoning board to reject the proposal "without prejudice," which means Core Investments could come back with a different proposal for the land within a year.
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Comments
...doesn't fit with a city
By Rob
Fri, 09/11/2020 - 2:53pm
We have a city vision?
Sure. Lots of cities aren't
By anon
Fri, 09/11/2020 - 3:20pm
Sure. Lots of cities aren't walkable at all. Walkability is definitely an integral part of Boston.
Yes
By Vi Sion
Fri, 09/11/2020 - 6:57pm
but it doesn't include jobs within walking distance.
lol
By lbb
Mon, 09/14/2020 - 11:41am
If you work at an Amazon distribution center, your "walking distance" would have to be in Ware for you to afford housing.
well...
By johnmcboston
Sat, 09/12/2020 - 10:51am
Technically we don't, but that section of DOT ave has a lot of new and planned construction for business and residences. Plopping a huge, blocks long, blank wall would kind of kill things in that area
Warehouse to warehouse doesn't sound like a change of use
By Ron Newman
Fri, 09/11/2020 - 3:49pm
Although I sympathize with the BPDA's position, how do they get to rule at all on the transfer of a warehouse from one tenant to another?
its about traffic
By cinnamngrl
Fri, 09/11/2020 - 5:57pm
There is one of these places in HP or Wrox and the neighbors cant stand all the idling delivery worker vans.
It's in Dedham
By In The Know
Fri, 09/11/2020 - 6:10pm
It's on Sprague Street in Dedham not that far outside of Wolcott Sq and the Readville MBTA station. The area is an industrial park that is on the edge of a residential zone.
Not to digress
By Waquiot
Fri, 09/11/2020 - 7:18pm
And we’ve been on good terms lately, but our first dustup was about the area where the Amazon warehouses are. Methinks you sometimes argue about places you are unfamiliar with.
was my comment inaccurate?
By cinnamngrl
Sat, 09/12/2020 - 11:37am
was my comment inaccurate?
Oh, you
By Waquiot
Sat, 09/12/2020 - 12:11pm
Bless your heart.
Apples and Oranges
By J.R. Dobbs
Sat, 09/12/2020 - 9:47am
Perhaps you're not very familiar with the proposed area.
WWSLD?
By Rob
Fri, 09/11/2020 - 5:26pm
WWSLD?
What would Shirley Leung do?
The BPDA has limits....lol
By bostondriver
Fri, 09/11/2020 - 5:38pm
They just didn't get their bribe money.
BINGO
By J.R. Dobbs
Sat, 09/12/2020 - 9:55am
you jest but it's true...
So many problems with this
By Daan
Fri, 09/11/2020 - 8:20pm
The BPDA/BRA or whatever they spend another 3/4 million $ on renaming themselves should not be the last decision here. They are not elected. Decisions at this level should be dependent on being re-elected. This is where Marty lied; he promised to reign in this Authority and didn't.
If by residential neighborhood BPDA means structures higher than 3 stories then they are gaslighting everyone. A "neighborhood" of that is composed of structures higher can not be a real neighborhood. In this case size matters.
That is why the Seaport will never be a true neighborhood.
And yet, Amazon, Target and Walmart create retail monetary vacuums that destroy local businesses. So whether the BPDA folks are thinking about this aspect or not, not allowing an Amazon warehouse in the city is at least one less nail in the coffin that buries locally owned retail.
Life can be complicated.
If by residential
By CH
Fri, 09/11/2020 - 11:55pm
Chinatown? Fenway? South End?
Also Back Bay? Beacon Hill?
By anon
Sun, 09/13/2020 - 10:16pm
Also Back Bay? Beacon Hill? The North End? Even Mass Ave between Harvard and Porter?
Plenty of lovely neighborhoods are taller than 3 stories. The key is to design them for people rather than cars.
Are you...
By Dot Ave Resident
Sat, 09/12/2020 - 3:49pm
high as a kite? Because I'd like what you're having.
You have a very narrow view of what constitutes a neighborhood, and if that's your idealistic view, fine, just head off to the 'burbs and take your drivel with you.
Amazon Warehouse
By g
Sat, 09/12/2020 - 3:57pm
Apparently it is ok to have the Amazon delivery trucks along with UPS and Fedex clog up the streets, as long as they keep the jobs outside of Boston.
Your "neighborhood" is nonsense.
By anon
Sat, 09/12/2020 - 6:42pm
That's 100% hogwash. I used to live in one of ~250 units that made up three residential ~12 story towers, with a common lobby area. We, along with the single family houses and ~8 unit condo buildings in the block absolutely made up a neighborhood, complete with dogwalkers recognizing each other, showing up to NIMBY proposals, knocking on doors come election time, the works.
This is universalhub. Not universal I live in the burbs and eschew the city but still throw my 1950s post-WW2 suburbia opinions around anyway.
You could tear down the upper
By anon
Sun, 09/13/2020 - 2:11am
You could tear down the upper portion of the Seaport above the 3rd floor and it would still be a fake place. Height isn’t the problem. It isn’t the answer either, as some people in this forum insist.
Oh, we'll just take a pass on
By anon
Sat, 09/12/2020 - 8:10am
Oh, we'll just take a pass on jobs and tax revenue.
Yes, yes
By lbb
Mon, 09/14/2020 - 11:43am
dEr GuD jErBz at an Amazon warehouse.
I wasn't aware...
By jon_
Mon, 09/14/2020 - 2:16am
...of the whole new development plan, even though I've noticed some of the new construction over time. Does this mean that one day soon one can walk down that section of Dot Ave and not see the name MARR even once? :-)
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