Hey, there! Log in / Register

Catholic church in Hyde Park looks to raise money by leasing some of its property for apartments

Most Precious Blood Church in Hyde Park

Most Precious Blood parish.

Officials at Most Precious Blood Church have begun looking at leasing church property to an apartment developer as a way to ensure a new revenue stream for the church and two affiliated parishes in Readville and Milton.

But at a meeting last night at the former St. Anne School in Readville, parishioners soundly opposed a proposal to turn the main church building on Maple Street into 24 apartments and convert a basement chapel into the main worship area.

The Blue Hills Collaborative, which oversees Most Precious Blood, St. Anne and St. Pius in Milton, is, for the moment, actually in good financial condition, with some $6.5 million in the bank, in large part from the sale of property, and with $500,000 a year in rental payments for the former Most Precious Blood School on Hyde Park Avenue.

The collaborative was set to spend $5 million of its savings on repairs to the 138-year-old Most Precious Blood Church last year but called off the work after Boston Preparatory Charter Public School, which had been renting the school, pulled out of its lease on completion of its own school building on River Street near Mattapan.

Another charter school, Roxbury Prep, signed a three-year lease while it tries to build its own school on Belgrade Avenue in Roslindale, but church officials realized that after that, the church could face a risk finding another tenant for the Hyde Park Avenue school. Coupled with a still aging church building and declining Sunday offerings, Father Ronald Coyne and a church financial official began thinking about ways to ensure the church's long-term survival.

Working with the Archdiocese of Boston's property-management office and a local real-estate broker, they came up with the proposal for removing the main church building's stained-glass windows, pews and other religious items and letting a developer turn it into 24 apartments. Revenue from the leases could net the church $50,000 or $60,000 annually, which would ease financial concerns even as the church paid to expand a basement chapel into a new church for the parish. Because of its location near the Hyde Park commuter-rail station, the city would likely let the developer provide less parking than otherwise needed - a good thing given the scarcity of parking already at the church.

At a meeting with roughly 200 parishioners from the three collaborative churches, last night, Coyne and Deborah Dillon, director of property management for the archdiocese, emphasized the proposal was not a done deal, it was just an idea, and that just closing the parish was not even on the table.

But parishioners strongly objected to the conversion of the "mother church" into rental apartments. One said it was the most "awe inspiring" of the three local church buildings and even just walking into it is "spiritually uplifting."

And parishioners proposed other possible ways for the church to bring in more revenue.

One parishioner suggested turning the old St. Anne school, now used for joint programs by the three churches, into housing. She said Readville is suddenly hot among developers and that the land might prove highly attractive to a developer. In fact, tonight, the BPDA holds a meeting at the school building on one developer's plans for 521 apartments next to the Readville train station. Collaborative programs could be moved into the Most Precious Blood basement, with some renovation work, she said.

Another proposed letting a developer turn the Most Precious Blood school into apartments - they could probably add floors to it, that would mean extra revenue and the site would have the same transit-oriented benefits as the church building. Church officials said this would also be worth looking at, although they added any work couldn't begin until at least the end of Roxbury Prep's lease.

A third proposed bringing back bingo. Coyne said if anybody wants to go to the tremendous effort it would take to run that, he'd be happy to hear them out, but said bingo's days are likely gone now that people can just hop on a bus to go to a casino with better payouts.

Others suggested a greater emphasis on "evangelizing," on bringing back members who have stopped attending the church and on attracting the new families some parishioners said have started moving into Hyde Park. The church has seen a growth in Haitian members in recent years.

Although Coyne and other officials repeatedly said no decision about the future has been made, they did point out the current physical state of the Most Precious Blood church; one official estimated the building had made a couple of years left before it began to fall apart in a major way.

Turn this into apartments?

Interior of Most Precious Blood
Neighborhoods: 
Topics: 


Ad:


Like the job UHub is doing? Consider a contribution. Thanks!

Comments

Admittedly, I’ve only been in the church once, ironically with Rev. Coyne back when he was at Sacred Heart. It is the nicest of the collaborative’s 3 churches, and shunting services to the basement is just wrong.

I hope the parish can come up with a better solution than this. Thanks for sharing, Adam.

up
Voting closed 0

Fr. Coyne <3

up
Voting closed 0

He’s good at what he does, but he also tamps down his theological side.

Also, back in the day he was a very aggressive driver.

up
Voting closed 0

but he also tamps down his theological side.

What does that mean?

up
Voting closed 0

But his pastoral approach is very much playing to the masses. I mean, it’s not like you have to choose between the two- Frank Kelley does a good job mixing in messages about theology and scripture with stories of his nieces and nephews in his homilies.

up
Voting closed 0

that they’re missing out on some funding opportunities. Why not go back to selling indulgences? Saint Peter’s was built that way, surely it’s good enough for fixing up a church in Hyde Park. If they do decide to go with the apartment scheme, they should be able to demand top dollar by suggesting that actually living within the body of the church puts you on a fast track out of Purgatory. Wake up and smell the incense, as they say.

up
Voting closed 0

This area is or should be zoned for single family and maybe 2 family homes only, the church as a place of worship can exist due to religious freedoms but it will be harmful to the neighborhood and the character of the neighborhood to add this kind of density. This church claims it is a religious entity, be good religious people then and stop trying to ruin the neighborhood to get more money

up
Voting closed 0

Boston needs thousands, of 5+ story apartment buildings and no area is exempt. In fact, areas like Hyde Park and West Roxbury are the parts of the city where it may be possible to build such buildings and have the units sold or rented at "reasonable"* rates.

*Reasonable for the current real estate prices, but hardly reasonable by any common sense standard which would cap units at less than $200 per square foot.

up
Voting closed 0

I lived almost across the street from the church in a multi-unit brick apartment block. Single family zoning drives up housing prices - thanks for your thoughtful suggestion.

up
Voting closed 0

Others suggested a greater emphasis on "evangelizing,"

True, you never see Catholics do much evangelizing. I always see some Christian sect at Harvard station passing out some kind of literature. I wonder why Catholics don't do things like that.

up
Voting closed 0

I think everyone in Boston has already heard of catholicism(remember when Boston priests raped hundreds of kids?) and many people don't want to be preached at since its annoying and condescending.

up
Voting closed 0

Then there wouldn't be all those nutjobs bothering people walking past or to Planned Parenthood.

up
Voting closed 0

Didn't give South Boston a choice.

up
Voting closed 0

Coming at this as a complete outsider, is there any proposal on the table to sell one of the other two parishes in the collaborative? I know it's a touchy subject, but St. Pius X and St. Anne don't have the aesthetically redeeming qualities of MPB, and are also younger (SPX significantly so). The parishes aren't too far apart geographically, and that real estate in Milton must be extremely valuable.

Tough decisions to make, but might be better retaining the beautiful sanctuary of MPB for worship rather than relegating parishioners to the catacombs. Maybe not.

up
Voting closed 0

I think the general consensus so far is to find other ways of generating consistent cash flow. Besides, selling or leasing one of the other two properties wouldn't benefit MPB directly; in a collaborative, all parishes remain distinct entities, retaining their own assets and liabilities. But it would take some of the pressure off MPB's contribution to the overhead (currently 50%) if, say, some or all of Saint Anne School were leased out so that Saint Anne had more to contribute to the overhead. Right now, any and all ideas (except closure) are on the table for discussion, but the main thrust so far seems to be keeping the upper church at MPB intact.

up
Voting closed 0

If a religious organization leases out the property to a private developer for commercial use, does the religious organization still get the tax exempt status for that location?

up
Voting closed 0

As far as I'm aware (and someone please correct if I'm wrong), as long as the organization owns the property the exemption still applies. I remember a similar question coming up when we started leasing our school building.

up
Voting closed 0

But the school thing is tough. Who was it leased to? Another educational institution, meaning it would be an exempt purpose?

The closest thing I found was for education. 700 Commonwealth Avenue, which any BU alum could tell you is the location of Warren Towers. The school is taxed on the area that is leased out to private vendors. At one time, one of the tenants was Taco Bell, which famously had to give out free tacos after Dave Roberts stole a base during the World Series.

For the life of me, I cannot think of an instance where a religious institution leased out space for a use that would be subject to property tax, though. It's either been selling property that became residential or leasing to a school.

up
Voting closed 0