星期三, 11月 11, 2015

BRA board approves new John Hancock building at November meeting

BRA board approves new John Hancock building at November meeting
Also approves housing in Jamaica Plain and Roslindale; Watertown HVAC company set to redevelop property in Boston Marine Industrial Park

BOSTON – The Board of Directors of the Boston Redevelopment Authority (BRA) approved four development projects worth an estimated $374.7 million at last night’s meeting. Most notably, John Hancock received approval to construct a new $350 million, 26-story office tower in Back Bay that will include a public lobby with restaurant and retail space, a roof deck, and four levels of underground parking. The board also approved small housing projects in Roslindale and Jamaica Plain. 
After granting a tentative designation in June, the board gave final approval for J.C. Cannistraro, a plumbing and HVAC company based in Watertown, to rehabilitate a large BRA-owned industrial building in the South Boston Waterfront. The company plans to use the new facility to fabricate plumbing, HVAC, fire protection, and related construction products. 
To help further Mayor Martin J. Walsh’s goal of making Boston a municipal arts leader, the BRA board approved a $60,000 grant to Technical Development Corporation to conduct a cultural facilities assessment. The study will survey Boston’s arts and culture landscape and quantify the needs of the performing arts community. The BRA has been working closely with the Mayor’s Office and the Mayor’s Chief of Arts and Culture Julie Burros on cultural planning.
Below is a summary of the development projects that were approved last night.

380 Stuart Street will be home to new signature office building for John Hancock

Total Project Cost: $350,000,000
Total SF: 625,000
Construction Jobs: 454

John Hancock plans to begin construction on its new $350 million, 625,000 square foot building in Back Bay in the second half of 2016 with the goal of completing the project in early 2019. The 26-story tower, designed by Skidmore, Owings & Merrill to be LEED Gold certifiable, will replace a nine-story building at 380 Stuart Street. The new office building, which will provide workspace for over 3,000 employees, is expected to include a conference center, collaborative space, a fitness center, ground floor retail and restaurant space, and a roof deck that could be used for community events. The project will contain approximately 175 underground parking spaces for occupants and visitors, as well as five loading bays that will be accessed off of an adjacent alley.
As required by zoning, John Hancock will contribute approximately $5.25 million over several years in so-called linkage payments to support affordable housing creation and workforce development in Boston. The company will put $4.38 million into the Neighborhood Housing Trust and over $876,000 into the Neighborhood Jobs Trust.
New pedestrian and bicycle accommodations are planned as part of the project. Generous sidewalks, street furnishings, landscaping, lighting, and other amenities will help animate the streets around the building. John Hancock will also commit a total of $100,000 to the Friends of Copley Square to help maintain and improve the public park.

Bartlett Square II to add transit-oriented housing near Orange Line in Jamaica Plain

Total Project Cost: $3,500,000
Total SF: 24,080
Construction Jobs: 17

A vacant lot across from the Green Street MBTA station on the Orange Line will be redeveloped with 15 new rental apartments and commercial space as part of the Bartlett Square II project in Jamaica Plain. The project follows on the heels of Bartlett Square I, a nearby condo building that opened in 2012. The same development team, led by Christopher DeSisto, is behind Bartlett Square II.
The four-story Bartlett Square II will consist of three three-bedroom apartments, nine two-bedroom units, and three one-bedroom units. In accordance with the city’s affordable housing requirements, the project will have two affordable units designated for households earning 70 percent of area median income or below (or less than $48,250 for a one-person household).
Bartlett Square II will include two ground-floor retail spaces that total approximately 5,700 square feet. While specific tenants have not been identified, the developer hopes to attract a restaurant for one of the spaces and lease the remaining space for office use. Designed by Spalding-Tougias Architects, the project will feature a solar array on the roof. 
The developer hopes to begin construction by March 2016 and complete the project by July 2017.

Former gas station site in Roslindale will be transformed for housing 

Total Project Cost: $6,200,000
Total SF: 24,210
Construction Jobs: 18

Horizon Development, LLC received approval to build 16 new condominium units on the site of the former Weld American Auto Service gas station at the corner of Weld and Centre Street in Roslindale. The location, which is currently an eyesore in the community and has been vacant for the last ten years, will be enhanced with the new four-story residential building at 100 Weld Street. 
Residents will enter through the first floor, which will contain an office unit and the building’s mechanical and utility systems. The condominium units will be located on floors two through four. There will be 26 on-site parking spaces, with 15 enclosed on the ground floor for residents and 11 outside for guests and the office unit.

J.C. Cannistraro receives final designation to rehab building in Boston Marine Industrial Park for new fabrication facility

Total Project Cost: $15,000,000
Total SF: 157,000
Construction Jobs: 62

J.C. Cannistraro, a Watertown-based provider of plumbing, fire protection, HVAC, and sheet metal pre-fabrication services, will move forward with plans to substantially rehabilitate a worn industrial building at 25 Fid Kennedy Avenue in the Boston Marine Industrial Park. The BRA board tentatively designated the company as the redeveloper of the 157,000 square foot building in June. Cannistraro and the BRA’s sister agency, the Economic Development and Industrial Corporation, have come to terms on a fifty-year lease for the parcel that paved the way for final designation.
The company will overhaul the building to accommodate welding, assembly, fabrication, materials storage, and new office space. The existing freight elevators and stair towers will be upgraded and supplemented by a new enclosed fire staircase and an open-sided vertical lift for materials.
Cannistraro intends to move approximately 100 jobs to the new facility.

About the Boston Redevelopment Authority
As the City of Boston’s urban planning and economic development agency, the BRA works in partnership with the community to plan Boston's future while respecting its past. The agency’s passionate and knowledgeable staff guides physical, social, and economic change in Boston’s neighborhoods and its downtown to shape a more prosperous, resilient, and vibrant city for all. The BRA also prepares residents for new opportunities through employment training, human services and job creation. Learn more at www.bostonredevelopmentauthority.org, and follow us on Twitter @BostonRedevelop.

MAYOR WALSH JOINS BRIGHTON MARINE HEALTH CENTER TO ANNOUNCE $200,000 HOMELESS VETERANS HOUSING FUND

MAYOR WALSH JOINS BRIGHTON MARINE HEALTH CENTER TO ANNOUNCE $200,000 HOMELESS VETERANS HOUSING FUND
Endowment will Support Gaps in Housing Funding to End Veterans Homelessness
BOSTON - Wednesday, November 11, 2015 - To honor Veterans Day, Mayor Martin J. Walsh today joined the Brighton Marine Health Center Board of Directors to announce that Brighton Marine established a $200,000 endowment to support the Mayor's Homes for the Brave initiative, with the goal of bringing a functional end to veterans homelessness in Boston.

The endowment will create the Homeless Veterans Housing Fund, which will fill the current gaps in funding that can delay the process of securing permanent housing for Boston area veterans. The fund has already assisted 18 veterans by disbursing payments of up to $2,000 each.  The fund makes awards to organizations specializing in assisting homeless veterans with housing placement.
"No one who has served our country should be homeless - and in Boston, we're committed to giving our veterans the resources they need to succeed," said Mayor Walsh. "I thank the Brighton Marine Health Center for their partnership in this effort. The Homeless Veterans Housing Fund is an integral tool to support our fight to end homelessness among our veterans."

"Out of approximately 300 veterans in Boston without permanent housing, some 50 are holding Veterans Affairs Supportive Housing (VASH) subsidized housing certificates, but many are unable to secure housing because they lack funds for costs that VASH does not cover, such as security deposits, first month's rent payments, moving costs, brokers' fees, and rental application fees," said Brighton Marine's Chief Executive Officer, Michael Dwyer.  "For many veterans, these relatively small, one-time costs can spell the difference between permanent housing and spending more time in a shelter or on the street."

Veterans will be able to receive up to $2,000 from the fund. Costs considered under this fund include:
  • Security deposits
  • Application fees
  • Outstanding utility debt
  • Pro-rated rent gaps up to 15 days (to allow for vacant unit inspection if previous tenant is moving out end of month)
  • Veteran's portion of first month rent
  • Broker fees
The City of Boston is committed to connecting Boston's military families with the resources and assistance they are entitled to. Earlier this year, Mayor Walsh released "An Action Plan to End Veteran and Chronic Homelessness In Boston: 2015 - 2018", which outlines the City's strategies to transform Boston's homeless response system in order to end veterans homelessness by 2015 and chronic homelessness by 2018.

In July of 2014, Mayor Walsh announced that the City of Boston signed on to First Lady Michelle Obama's Mayoral Challenge to end homelessness among veterans.  As part of the "Homes for the Brave" initiative that was launched as a result, the City of Boston has committed to putting a functional end to veterans homelessness by the end of 2015.  Putting a functional end to homelessness means that:
  • No veteran will be forced to sleep on the streets;
  • When a veteran becomes homeless, it is rare and brief; and
  • All homeless veterans will be housed or on a pathway to stable housing by the end of the 2015
At the time of the launch, there were 414 homeless veterans in Boston.  Since then, 484 homeless veterans have been housed.  New veterans continue to enter the system; however, the average length of stay in shelter among veterans has been reduced.  At the start of the initiative, 50 percent of homeless veterans left shelter in less than six months; today, that number has increased to 70 percent.

Last week, the City, along with 11 partner agencies, hosted the first ever "housing surge" for veterans at the Pine Street Inn. Sixty homeless veterans met with representatives to better understand the housing resources available to them.

Over the weekend of Saturday, November 7 and Sunday, November 8, hundreds of volunteers went door-to-door throughout the City of Boston to personally thank the men and women who have served in the U.S. Military and provide them with the resources available to them as veterans living in Boston.

To honor Veterans Day, Mayor Walsh has lit the balcony outside the City Council Chambers red, white and blue to honor the men and women who have served our country.

ABOUT BRIGHTON MARINE HEALTH CENTER

Since 1940, Brighton Marine Health Center has provided clinical and social service resources to the Allston-Brighton community. Particular services focus on supporting the community's veterans and their families.  Brighton Marine currently works with the Veterans Administration and the City of Boston, and is in the process of expanding the network of agencies authorized to receive funding through the Homeless Veteran's Housing Fund.   For more information about the fund, visit Brighton Marine Health Center's website at http://www.brighton-marine.org .

Governor Baker on Veterans Day: “Thank You from a Grateful Nation”

BOSTON – Today at the Massachusetts State House, Governor Charlie Baker, Lt. Governor Karyn Polito, Major General L. Scott Rice, and Secretary of Veterans’ Services Francisco Ureña expressed the Commonwealth’s gratitude to its veterans and Gold Star Families, including Congressional Medal of Honor recipient Thomas Hudner.
GOVERNOR BAKER: The willingness with which our young people are likely to serve in any war, no matter how justified, shall be directly proportional to how they perceive the veterans of earlier wars were treated and appreciated by their nation. One of the great things I’ve observed as I’ve gotten older is people have gotten much better about separating the serviceman or the servicewoman, and their commitment, and their dedication, and yes, their sacrifice and the sacrifice of their families, from whatever people think about the conflict. You walk through an airport, you watch the way people treat and deal with members of our armed services who are in uniform, you can see it every day. Thank you for what you’ve done, the choice you’ve made, and the commitment you made to all of us. Every day somewhere in this great country of ours, someone is told thank you from a grateful nation. We should all say it a lot, every day, as often as we possibly can, because it’s a debt we can never repay. Thank you very much.

鍾倫納11/28談仁和禮

中華多媒體協會將於1128日(週六)下午24點,在中華廣教學校舉辦講座,邀每年復活節都從遷居地回波士頓探訪的鍾倫納博士,暢談“仁和禮,古與今今天適用的禮儀和仁行“。
中華多媒體協會表示,鍾倫納曾在中華耆英會,麻州老人事務局服務多年,後喬遷他地,潛心研究,撰述,屢次應邀到香港辦講座,今年11月又再度應邀,在香港中文大學大學服務中心和珠江三角洲社會研究中心合辦的講座中,以“道德新析---仁義禮智信的古今意義”為題做了一場學術演講。
該會特地趁鍾倫納在復活節期間回波士頓探親之際,邀他演講,分享他的研究成果,包括禮意,禮儀,禮制,禮法,仁的源變和要素,孔子言行的真諦,現代社會和新的仁和禮等。

演講將以粵語進行,或許會有普通話即時翻譯。支持者包括陳德慈,曾秀芬,鍾曼怡等人,查詢可洽鍾應泰(Tom Y Chung) ,774-365-2225,電郵eastmeetswest21@yahoo.com,網站www.emw21.com。

新設計聯盟慶成立 辦講座教人分析波市房地產

新設計聯盟上週末首次聚會,並邀麻省理工學院研究員,創辦美吉屋的楊曉雯,在布魯克蘭鎮公共圖書館分享她用大數據分析波士頓房價的看法,以及奧斯頓、布萊頓一帶增值潛力大的預測。
         新設計聯盟是由葉健,樂茜,秦嵐,辛之知等四名在建築設計業工作華人剛創辦的非牟利機構,正邀約華裔設計師,建築師加入,交流設計構想,業界資訊。
         楊曉雯在會中以大數據分析波士頓房產類型,以及就業增長和波士頓房價之間的關係。
         楊曉雯根據數據指出,華人買房子的趨勢是,在波士頓市內買共管公寓(condo)的人最多,其次是劍橋市,布萊頓(Brighton),布魯克蘭,昆士市,奧斯頓,摩頓市等市鎮。昆士市,勒星頓鎮,牛頓市則是買家庭屋的人多些。
         若以房價變化來看,在20042014年間,漲幅最大的是劍橋市,房屋中位價格從2005年的667500元,漲到2014年的120萬元,漲幅高達79.8%,交易量則下降了27.8%
         以漲幅來排,麻州內10大漲幅最高市鎮以及其中位房價,依序為牙買加平原漲40.6%70萬元;勒星頓鎮漲34.8%95萬元;南波士頓漲33.3%545000元;布魯克蘭鎮漲32.6%1485000元;尚莫維爾市漲27.2%545000元;康可鎮(Conco)漲26.1%914000元;貝爾蒙市漲24.9%899000元;牛頓市漲23.8%941000元;溫徹斯特(Winchester)漲23%90萬元5000元 。
         她指出,投資房地產應該關注房價的歷史變化,並從地點,房型,時間來進一步分析淨租金回報率,以及升值潛力和風險。
         計算淨租金回報率時,先從每年淨房租收入除已購房總價,就是資金回報率百分比。每年淨房租收入等於年租金收入減去房產稅,房屋保險,社區費,維修費,空置其,分攤費,出租管理費等費用後的數目。據她所知,在同一區域內,獨立式住宅的租金回報率,基本上會低於聯排式住宅和公寓。
         影響升值潛力的因素,包括交通便利性,周邊工作機會,有無大型項目建設,政府管理是否良好等。
         至於買投資房要評估的風險包括,可能長期空置,找到的房客賴租金,篩選房客不容易等。
         選擇自住房時,要從社區平均房價,學區,鄰居結構,安全指數,交通指數,環境衛生等,來評估最適合自己的選擇。
         首先,不要買價格遠高於社區平均房價的房子,其次看房子所在的小學,初中,高中各屬於哪個學區,該學區的評估概況,包括宜避免過度競爭的“亞裔好區”,住進族裔比例較平均的社區,可能是更好的選擇。至於鄰居構成,也是影響房價的因素之一,鄰居都是家庭中位收入高,教育程度高,已婚,有小孩的話,就多半都是住在自己擁有的房子裏,大環境就更穩定。
         至於安全指數,有8種不同的犯罪率等級,5個安全等級。交通方面則有自駕車,步行,搭公交車人數比率。
         至於環境衛生上,要查看的是房子附近有沒垃圾場,放射性污染源,是不是洪水區等等。


 
圖片說明:

            左起,盧犁多,葉健,樂茜,楊曉雯,陳望,秦嵐,辛知之等新設計聯盟成員和講者合影。(菊子攝)

            楊曉雯分析買投資房,自住房應關注要項。(菊子攝)


星期二, 11月 10, 2015

摩頓市“別一個人過感恩節”活動 11/26舉行

摩頓市“生命麵包(Bread for Life)”將於11月26日(週四)下午兩點,在摩頓市高中餐廳(77 Salem St., Malden)舉辦“別一個人過感恩節(Don’t be Alone in Thanksgiving)”年度活動。
            這活動由生命麵包及摩頓市的安東尼,Ferryway學校,Forestdale社區教堂,Hoff;s烘培店,摩頓獅子會,瑪麗的外烹店,摩頓市長葛帝生(Gary Christenson),哥倫布武士會等等贊助。
            活動向所有人開放,也歡迎各界參加義工團隊,詢可洽生命麵包781-397-0404 ,電郵 info@breadoflifemalden.org,或 781-321-0994 (晚上),或 gpinkham@inscribe.com