The Heights Hotel Part III - The Waiting Game
UPDATE - Once again the next hearing has been cancelled. Attorney Mary Winstanley O'Conner has written to the Redevelopment Board asking that it be continued to January 27th, without explanation of reason of the delay or why the developer waited so long to make this last minute request.
Since then, hardly a peep. There was a continuance to September, and then another to October. At that time the developer postponed it again, this time for another two months until the JANUARY 27th December 16 meeting of the Redevelopment Board. Nothing more has been released for the public.
There has been some activity behind the scenes, though. Back on August 12th, the developer did meet with some members of the Redevelopment Board to discuss the project. Not at the public meeting that same evening, but just beforehand behind closed doors. It was another of those unannounced, closed to the public, very private get togethers that leave the public in the dark about what is going on. No minutes kept and not even a brief announcement of what went on or who attended.
Meanwhile, there has been a new development next door at 1215 Mass Ave. The building that formerly housed Nicola’s is being converted into a liquor store. The owner has already been before the Select Board and next will seek approval of the Redevelopment Board. Whatever traffic studies the hotel developer has conducted need to be amended to account for the new use next door.
There has been some activity behind the scenes, though. Back on August 12th, the developer did meet with some members of the Redevelopment Board to discuss the project. Not at the public meeting that same evening, but just beforehand behind closed doors. It was another of those unannounced, closed to the public, very private get togethers that leave the public in the dark about what is going on. No minutes kept and not even a brief announcement of what went on or who attended.
Meanwhile, there has been a new development next door at 1215 Mass Ave. The building that formerly housed Nicola’s is being converted into a liquor store. The owner has already been before the Select Board and next will seek approval of the Redevelopment Board. Whatever traffic studies the hotel developer has conducted need to be amended to account for the new use next door.
To refresh your memory of the history of this drawn out process, it was four and a half years ago that Town Meeting voted to approve the sale of 1207 Mass Ave. The Town budget actually included an expected $1,000,000 from the sale to help pay for the Stratton School project. The RFP bid that was accepted in late 2016 was for only $750,000. The actual Purchase and Sale Agreement was signed just about a year ago, but the transaction has yet to be completed and it seems that the developer can back out of the deal if he does not get what he wants from the Redevelopment Board.
There is every reason for the developer to stall. His purchase price for the town property remains fixed at the 2016 level even as real estate prices in Arlington have rocketed in the last three years. More ominously, the Planning Dept is again pushing zoning changes for the Heights business district which conveniently has been defined as extending all the way to Forest St, thus including the hotel. The proposed changes were authored by our old friends, the Metropolitan Area Planning Council, and go even further than the zoning changes that failed at Town Meeting last spring. The new version would have that entire block of B2 (small businesses serving the neighborhood) rezoned to a super B3 district. What does that mean for the abutting homes on Clark, Peirce, Forest, and Locke? Think about higher and denser buildings, four or five stories in your backyard.
And for the developer, it means that many of those pesky zoning limitations that restrict him will go away.
Stay tuned. Or better still, come to the hearing on JANUARY 27th