![Proposed mini-driveway to allow for EV](https://universalhub.com/files/styles/main_image_-_bigger/public/images/2023/chargingcut.jpg)
Diagram by RODE Architects.
Matthew Malloy of Ocean Street in Dorchester really, really wants to buy an electric vehicle. But he doesn't have a driveway and ISD has warned him that if he tries to run an extension cord over the sidewalk to a car parked at the curb, he'd get fined.
Malloy found relief today at a hearing of the Zoning Board of Appeal, which unanimously gave him permission to build a sort of mini-driveway up his front yard so he could pull in whichever EV he buys and plug it into the Level 2 charger he will also buy.
Malloy, CEO of the Dorchester Brewing Co., needed a variance because city zoning normally forbids parking spaces in front yards.
He said he tried to convince his neighbor to build a shared driveway - he even offered her the equivalent of $17,000 - but she just wasn't amped up about the idea and refused him. Driving 1.7 miles to the nearest public charging station, and then waiting in line to charge up wasn't practical, he said.
Shockingly, he said, Boston is not keeping current with some neighboring communities and has no answers for homeowners in a situation like his, even as City Hall is pushing for electrification of pretty much everything.
His plans, which called for a mini-driveway just large enough to pull his car in and plug it in, got no resistance from the local neighborhood association; in fact, it sent in a letter of support. Councilors Brian Worrell, Frank Baker, Erin Murphy and Michael Flaherty also supported the idea.
And, Malloy said, he's so committed to the idea of an electric vehicle, he would agree to remove the small driveway and curb cut if he ever went back to a gas vehicle.
The board approved his request for a variance unanimously - with a proviso the space only be used for an EV.
Board member Katie Whewell said she was very sympathetic. "It's something I'd think the city would want to encourage electric vehicles."
Malloy did not specify what sort of EV he's thinking about.
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Comments
I get it
By cybah
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 2:11pm
I get why he did this. And somewhat applaud the board for allowing this, but I gotta ask the question..
If you live in a place that does not have off street parking and you purchased an electric car that had to be plugged in. The city won't allow you to run a cable across the sidwalk so where did you expect to plug it in?
And there are electric cars that do not need to be plugged in. So why didn't you purchase that instead?
I don't own a car but the current state of the MBTA has made me reconsider buying one. I want an EV but I don't have a parking space to charge it. So I don't think a plug in model will work for me.. so I won't buy it.
So why didn't this guy come to that conclusion.
I fear this may open the door for more 'driveways' than we really should have.
What EVs don't need to be plugged in?
By adamg
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 2:27pm
There are certain electric/gas hybrids that, theoretically, you never have to plug in, but you really don't get full advantage of them if you don't, because then you're (only partially) charging the batteries with the gas engine, which kind of defeats the purpose of buying a car like that.
Ok
By cybah
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 2:41pm
My argument still is valid. If you don't have a place to plug it in, why would you buy it?
No chargers is somewhat possible…
By Taketombo
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 4:43pm
I’ve been driving a non-Tesla electric since 2013. I can charge at home, but there’s a lot of charging out there. For example, if I have to drive into the office, most of the garages in Boston offer it “free” with the price of parking for the day, there’s an at-cost charger at my husband’s work, etc etc. it’s a different world than it was 10 years ago.
… My sister in LA is considered getting an electric car with no dedicated charger because she’s could reliably charge it at work and there are public chargers at some of the metered street parking in LA. Ultimately, she decided against it because her daily commute is 60% (or more, with AC) of the car’s range.
But she considered it.
This guy isn’t buying the car unless he can charge it. Which makes sense.
Her commute is 60% or more of
By HouseSpeaker1
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 9:20pm
Her commute is 60% or more of the car's charge? Wth
You wouldn't. But maybe you
By anon
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 6:20pm
You wouldn't. But maybe you would work to create a place to charge one, and then buy one. Which is what this guy did.
Because the federal government mandates it
By robo
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 6:27pm
Which doesn’t apply to present, but isn’t that far away too
same reason....
By anon
Wed, 03/15/2023 - 9:40am
people without yards or space, buy dogs
Go back and read the article
By Brad.
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 2:39pm
Go back and read the article again. He didn’t buy one yet, and was planning on what to buy based upon this variance.
EVs are substantially different than hybrids, and on the whole more economical and less pollutant.
I live in this neighborhood and a mini driveway seems like a small price for less cars parked on the street and less gas cars in general.
Cybah, he didn't buy one.
By Rob
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 2:44pm
Cybah, he didn't buy one.
He wants to, but recognizes the practical needs AND is trying to go about it the right way.
Ok
By cybah
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 2:49pm
Then my arguement is still valid.
why would you even consider it if you didn't have a place to plug it in?
Because it’s a general problem…
By cdevers
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 3:12pm
If society needs to move everybody from internal combustion engine vehicles to electric ones, then we’re going to have to come up with a way for people, including city dwellers that don't necessarily have a garage or driveway, to charge their electric vehicles within a reasonable distance of each home.
Seems to me that one way to do this would be to install curbside chargers all over the place. That will be expensive, to be sure, but they’ll generate revenue over time, so the investment would be worthwhile in the long run, even if the upfront cost is going to be steep.
But if we don't do that, then homeowners like this one will try to find other ways to facilitate charging their electric cars at home. Seems like that's a greater good than the aesthetic concerns about the look of having an EV charger & parking spot on a homeowner’s private property.
Think back to the early days
By Mark Miller
Thu, 03/16/2023 - 3:08pm
Think back to the early days of ICE.
There were no gas stations. There were no highways.
In fact there were very few well paved roads.
Because
By Joe Bloggs
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 4:33pm
Just because you don't currently have the right setup doesn't mean it's impossible or that it shouldn't be considered.
That's like saying "Why did you even consider getting an all electric range if you don't have a 240v outlet in your kitchen?"
"Cause I could hire an electrician to pull a permit and install..."
"Yeah, but you don't have one now, so why would you even consider it if you didn't have a place to plug it in?"
"... I just told you why."
ZBA in Boston. Not as bad as the MBTA but....
By Daan
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 3:49pm
Illegals conversions of yard to parking is nothing new in Boston.
I know of a front yard in Dorchester that was converted into two parking spaces several years ago. I lived in the building. The conversion was illegal but no one complained. It came to the attention of ZBA only when the building on the property was converted from rental units to condos. The building owner apparently had to get a variance in order to sell it as part of the deeds of two of the condos.
The variance was denied. But the owner was not required to remove the parking space and the parking spaces were sold as deeded parking spaces. Units were sold with the parking spaces and nothing was said.
I interpreted that as indicating that at the time the ZBA had no teeth and that the city government had no interest in following up on a denial such as this one.
That was over 10 years ago. From my experience of the past couple of years zoning appeals also take a year or more. This does not help homeowners. But then there is more than one city agency that is supposed to be supportive of homeowners but misses the mark in that goal.
I do not know whether this is changing in the Wu administration. But when Menino and Walsh were mayor, based on direct and various witness of various city functions, such as the assessors office and zoning, where and when city government related to individuals, city hall was often an unpleasant "partner" in owning a home.
That is Boston. How that works out in Chelsea is another question.
Not illegal in this case
By adamg
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 4:05pm
Unlike seemingly every large-house landlord renting to college students in Brighton back in the day, he did not simply pave over his front lawn. He did things the right way and went to the zoning board first.
3 sorts of electrical-ish vehicles
By Michael Kerpan
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 6:53pm
1. Standard hybrid -- never plugged in, generates electricity while running on gas and then uses that in conjunction with the gas (to reduce gas consumption).
2, Pure electric -- must be plugged in, can't run without a charged battery
3. Plug-in hybrid -- has a battery that can handle about 30 miles or so (depending on variety of car) of electric driving. When that is used up on longer trips, it acts like a standard hybrid. Can be plugged in (and should be when possible). One can charge these slowly using a minimum of special equipment (say 10-13 hours) or one can buy a more high powered charging unit (which can do the same job in 2 hours or so).
they cant fix a hole in the
By anon
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 2:13pm
they cant fix a hole in the road or a broken street light for YEARS, but they can approve a variance for a CEO faster than Houdini escaping handcuffs!
Because 1.7 Miles to the nearest charger isn't practical for you? Too bad, Take the bus!
A stereotypical millionaire flexing their white privilege
The zoning board has nothin
By Brad.
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 2:42pm
The zoning board has nothin to do with streetlamps and potholes. They are not equivalent. And this “millionaire” (where is your proof of that? CEO is just a title) went thru proper channels, got local approval and more.
And no, 1.7 miles to your own car is not practical. Even at a brisk pace that is a 30-40 minute walk.
You're bringing your own personal baggage to the topic.
By Section77
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 3:00pm
The guy owns a local brewery, no need to pretend he's the CEO of Exxon-Mobil. The guy owns one (1) restaurant, he's not responsible for whatever you want to pin on him. It isn't reasonable to park your car 1.7 miles from where you live. Imagine if you had to store your bike that far away and take a bus to it.
Can't fix stupid, either
By Sources Say
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 5:11pm
Your first reaction to this story is to cry "white privilege" because he chose to do the right thing first by asking for a variance and presenting his case to the zoning board? He hasn't even bought his desired car yet. To claim "white privilege" because he weighed his options and then went about it the legal way is just absurd. The guy didn't pave over his lawn and cut out a driveway in the curbing. That would be an act of privilege. This guy went about it the right way and presented his case compellingly. He did not assert "white privilege" to get his way.
I use the 311 app, they fix things fast
By Dot net
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 8:15pm
You don't have to make exaggerated claims about the city's public works departments' slowness to show your disapproval of this ZBA variance. You can sell that story to suburbanites, but I use 311 all the time, through the app, and over the phone before that.
The city is fastidious about taking care of what they're able to take care of. I have had street lights and potholes I've reported fixed in under a week. If you have a problem like that, just report it. And then if you don't get action, contact your city councillors.
The city can't fix what it doesn't know. So tell them. If you don't get a satisfactory response, escalate. The city doesn't work if we don't work it.
The vast majority of my 311
By anon
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 11:02pm
The vast majority of my 311 tickets have been totally ignored by the city.
Agreed 311 is FAST and it
By Mark Miller
Thu, 03/16/2023 - 3:13pm
Agreed 311 is FAST and it works. I called about a broken street sign and someone came out the SAME DAY. I went out and talked to him telling him I had just called that morning and he said "that's why I am here". It took a month more to get it fixed but the response time was very fast.
“ "It's something I'd think
By Lee
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 2:15pm
“ "It's something I'd think the city would want to encourage electric vehicles." “
While they add less toxins to city air, electric vehicles still take up public parking spaces that could be put to better use, add to traffic congestion and are a danger to pedestrians and cyclists.
Boston should not be encouraging drivers to bring any road hogging vehicles into the city, electric or not.
Yes
By Angry Dan
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 5:07pm
EV's aren't a solution. They're just creating alternative pollution and space problems that are supposedly going to be "solved" by more pavement.
The people without the juice to get special treatment from the ZBA will wind up parking on the sidewalk and pedestrians will have to walk in the street.
Not really. Sidewalk parking
By anon
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 11:05pm
Not really. Sidewalk parking isn’t really a thing around here.
The city should allow stringing a wire across the sidewalk. It works in other places. The only tricky part is parking in front of your house, since someone else could park there first.
The entire topic is attempting to not use a public space.
By Section77
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 6:35pm
Sheesh
So he’ll never park the car …
By Lee
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 11:15pm
… anywhere else but his own driveway?
Think again.
The best way for the city to
By anon
Wed, 03/15/2023 - 11:42am
The best way for the city to fight car dependency isn't to deny a curb cut for a single-family house. It's to stop approving giant parking garages in big projects.
The best way for the
By NoMoreBanks
Wed, 03/15/2023 - 4:20pm
The best way for the government to discourage car dependency is make it possible for people to go about their daily lives without blocking off a two hour commute on either end for broken, inefficient, ineffective, and inconvenient public transit.
No reason why …..
By Lee
Wed, 03/15/2023 - 9:27pm
…. the city can’t do both.
No reason why …..
By Lee
Wed, 03/15/2023 - 9:27pm
…. the city can’t do both.
Thanks for keeping us current, Adam
By Dan Elsewhere
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 2:17pm
You really have that journalistic spark.
This should not be
By Whit
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 2:31pm
Under no circumstances should anyone be putting a driveway in front of their house.
Huh?
By Mark-
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 2:51pm
And why not?
This is a valuable giveaway
By Whit
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 3:24pm
This is a valuable giveaway of a public asset, namely what was a parking spot for anyone and is now permanently private. In addition, there are aesthetic reasons on a street as worthy of preservation as Ocean Street is. I woulda fought him.
How valuable in terms of dollars?
By spin_o_rama
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 3:30pm
And how much is currently being given away through free parking permits?
Hilarious to conjure up aesthetic preservation when talking about on street car storage.
They have a point
By BostonDog
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 4:16pm
Previously, the spot in front of the proposed driveway was open for anyone's use. Now if anyone parks there they will be towed. So it's basically giving the homeowner the exclusive use of a section of street. The homeowner pays nothing to the city for that use.
A weak point about parking, no point about preservation
By spin_o_rama
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 4:56pm
The parking spot was open for anyone's use *with a free parking permit for the neighborhood
Again, the permit holders pay nothing to the city for that exclusive use of a valuable public asset. And judging by the street view images, there is quite a bit of demand for on street parking here.
Maybe it should be priced accordingly before residents can start acting entitled to it. But then again, the neighborhood association had no resistance so I don't know what point you're trying to make.
Permit isn't exclusive use
By BostonDog
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 5:33pm
A parking permit won't ensure you get a spot, only that you won't get a ticket if you find one.
This guy basically has a "super" parking permit which always gives him that space that no one else can use. (Or multiple spaces, as other note.)
I don't care one way or another since I don't live nearby. And I agree the preservation part isn't valid. (Although drainage and non-permutable ground cover is a valid concern in the city.)
Yeah thats fair, its a permit for spots and not a specific space
By spin_o_rama
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 7:47pm
And believe me, I take issue with the precedent set here granting this variance. And I look at my own street in Brighton full of front yard parking (grandfathered in maybe?)
But the pushback from the OP on this thread that I responded to was about giveaways of valuable public assets, which we are already giving away for free.
Again it doesn't seem like an issue to the neighborhood association here, which does honestly shock me because parking concerns are typically weaponized in opposition to housing projects or bike infrastructure but I guess when its only 1 or 2 spots its not a concern.
Actually wait, that still puzzles me.
Should be at least two parking spaces
By ML_
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 5:18pm
Per BTD guidelines "New driveways added at residential dwellings need to accommodate a minimum of two (2) vehicular spaces for every one (1) public on-street parking space that will be removed as a result of the new driveway. A new driveway accommodating three (3) vehicular spaces for every one (1) public on-street parking space is the preferred ratio."
Why is he being allowed one space? This is converting public space to private.
Because he got a variance.
By anon
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 6:22pm
Because he got a variance. And the neighbors supported it.
Why is it the city's policy to increase the number of parking spaces anyway? I thought we're trying to make our city more walkable and transit-friendly.
This isn't the only
By anon
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 6:23pm
This isn't the only residential curb cut in the City of Boston.
I was shocked to read this
By Matt
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 2:47pm
What a revolting development.
Watt is this world coming to?
By CopleyScott17
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 2:49pm
Ohm just kidding.
Electrifying journalism, as always
By cdevers
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 3:14pm
I see what you did there…
> […] she just wasn't amped up about the idea […]
…and there…
> […] Shockingly, he said, […]
…and there…
> […] Boston is not keeping current […]
…and also there:
> […] His plans […] got no resistance […]
I’m slightly disappointed that the article didn’t end with a comment about Ohm-improvements, or sign off with “that’s all, volts!”
I’m just glad
By Matt
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 3:19pm
He didn’t insulate himself from community input and was conductive to their feedback.
They’re so Farad out there
By Tu32qab7th
Wed, 03/15/2023 - 1:22am
I truly applaud the author’s literary capacitance.
What is "the equivalent" of $17,000?
By anon
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 3:51pm
Did he offer the neighbor $17,000 worth of his beer? The wording just raises an eyebrow.
Would consider it
By Cranky
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 4:27pm
It’s really good beer. I would consider the offer…
The construction costs
By Joe Bloggs
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 4:53pm
I was guessing that he offered to pay for the entire driveway, maybe also landscaping around the new driveway, and any other changes that might be adjacent/related (new gate/fence for the neighbor, that sort of thing).
Maybe he offered tree fitty
By Tim Mc.
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 6:24pm
in Bitcoin.
Mini-driveway
By anon
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 4:11pm
It's a driveway. Putting the word 'mini' in front of it is just spin.
Gotta ask
By BostonDog
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 4:18pm
Why not just install a charger at his brewery and charge while at work? Looks like they have a parking lot.
They don’t have a parking lot
By dd808
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 5:41pm
They don’t have a parking lot. That belongs to the property next door.
A couple reasons I can think of:
By fungwah
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 5:42pm
1. That doesn't work that well on weekends; most people don't want to have to go into the office just to charge their car.
2. Depending on his daily work routine, he might not be at the brewery long enough on a regular basis to get a full charge.
Whereas, most people tend to be at their homes overnight and not using their car, so it's easy enough to leave it plugged in and charging.
He might not drive to work.
By anon
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 6:23pm
He might not drive to work.
Unfortunately
By anon
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 5:00pm
This is going to be the norm going forward. I need a driveway so I can charge the EV I might be buying down the road.
Looks to me that the ZBA just
By anon
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 5:05pm
Looks to me that the ZBA just opened a can of worm by creating this precedent. Curb cuts for driveway are not benign; they make the street less pedestrian friendly and lead to the loss of public street parking space. From now on, anyone who wants a curb cut for off-street parking (all new cars will soon be electric) just needs to show up to the ZBA with the same argument.
This variance was granted to a rich white guy -if in doubt google Ocean St in Dorchester. Most people in the city are not rich white guys and if they get declined the same favor, they will be have a pretty discrimination claim.
On a block of single family
By anon
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 11:15pm
On a block of single family homes, a curb cut isn’t such a big deal. Not too many pedestrians, and not too many cars will be using the curb cut.
Not so on the first block of Newbury Street.
What pisses me off is when the city allows towers downtown to have huge curb cuts and valet staging areas. This is a slap in the face to pedestrians: https://goo.gl/maps/ifkVnB8BVK4zvDz86
How about a wire OVER the sidewalk?
By Charles Bahne
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 5:08pm
In our neighborhood in Cambridge, a few years ago, someone rigged up a charging wire that went over the sidewalk, 8 or 10 feet above it. As I recall, there was a pole attached to the fence on the property owner's side. I think they may have attached it loosely to a street tree next to the curb. No one complained and I thought it was pretty ingenious.
It hasn't been there in a while. I think they moved and the house was bought by someone else.
whats wrong with extention cords ?
By schneidz
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 8:06pm
whats wrong with extention cords ?
I will trip
By Benny
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 10:24pm
I will trip on it and eat s***
maybe with a channel?
By anon
Wed, 03/15/2023 - 10:42am
adding a driveway to a street with no driveways is a hell of a lot more intrusive than figuring out a way to neatly run a wire across a sidewalk.
city owned charging station ?
By schneidz
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 8:09pm
maybe the city should install an e.v. parking space in front of the house and charge to use it.
Yeah lol that will
By NoMoreBanks
Wed, 03/15/2023 - 8:08am
Yeah lol that will incentivize people to buy electric.
His mistake was to ask. You
By Wilma Flint Stone
Tue, 03/14/2023 - 10:08pm
His mistake was to ask. You see paved over front yards all over Dorchester.
Chargers
By C. Austin
Wed, 03/15/2023 - 9:06am
Hey Boston, Ever hear of a town called Melrose…
https://www.theverge.com/2022/8/12/23301826/pole-m...
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