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Developers that specialize in rehabbing old buildings look to build new apartments on Lower Roxbury parking lot

Architect's rendering: One Newcomb Place in Roxbury

Architect's rendering.

Developers are proposing a six-story, 23-unit apartment building on what is now a parking lot on Newcomb St., off Washington Street, in lower Roxbury.

The building, to be called One Newcomb Place, would sit between two older buildings that developers Joseph DiGangi and V. William Avanessian converted into apartments, one a 1904 building at 11 Newcomb, the other a formerly fire-ravaged hulk at 1902 Washington St.

In their filing with the BPDA, DiGangi and Avanessian propose nine 1-bedroom apartments, six 2-bedroom units, six three-bedroom units and two three-bedroom duplexes. Three of the units would be rented as affordable.

Tenants would get a shot at a space in a 20-space lot shared with a neighboring building. The developers say demand for parking will likely be low since the proposed building is just 400 feet from a Silver Line stop and less than a mile from the Ruggles and Massachusetts Avenue stops on the Orange Line.

Architect's rendering

In their filing, the developers describe some of the building's benefits:

The proposed project will serve to further transform a once sparsely populated and high crime area of the city into a vibrant mixed income neighborhood. Apart from the creation of 23 new residential apartments and one [handicap-accessible] unit, there will be additional site improvements for landscaping, pedestrian walk-ways and lighting along Newcomb Street. Currently the existing street lights along Newcomb Street are utilitarian in design and are powered from electrical supply lines above. We propose to provide power to the lights from below ground when we dig the street and replace the current lights with the ornamental acorn style lights that can be found all along Washington Street. The project will also create or cause to be created three new affordable housing units that will provide 3 families in the neighborhood an opportunity to live in a new construction luxury building at an affordable price.

This addition to the existing building will complete the overall look and massing of Newcomb Street. We feel our proposal for the overall site at six (6) stories is very much in keeping with the current density in the neighborhood. Not only is the scale appropriate, but we feel the building aesthetic, when complete, will add a great deal to the look and feel of the neighborhood. The addition will continue to bring new residents to a portion of the city that can support more people, and most importantly, it will do so without displacing any existing residents. Surrounding businesses will continue to benefit from increased foot traffic and an expanded customer base.

One Newcomb Place small-project review application (36M PDF).

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Comments

My friends who work on these tell me the new buildings are built like crap and make the three deckers look like Victorian mansions.

They certainly look despairing on the outside but what's it like to live in them?

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There are example renderings on page 11 of the PNF. I would describe them as "modern," "plain," and... "Ikea." But I'm sure that once people learn what they're going to cost it won't keep them from describing the units as "luxury housing."

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to find an exterior material that resembles actual cinderblock. I'm trying to be more open-minded about modern architecture and its limitations but Jesus...I've seen jollier looking prisons. But hey, points to them for making all the people in the rendering white. No beating around the bush there.

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These cardboard box apartments everywhere really are dreadful looking. Not sure why you would want to pay to live in a prison.

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FFS: This property has an address on Newcomb Street! Eight! Can't you just leave it at that, rather than confecting a Newcomb Place, where there is no previous Place, let alone a One Newcomb Place. We get it: your precious building is special—really special—and you want to give it a good start in life. But, guys, this is a building, not a baby.

This developer's onanistic obsession to make every new building its own place, square, or court disconnects these buildings from their context on a particular street. Eight. That's special enough.

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In the illustrations, the neighborhood looks whiter than Galway.

I guess Roxbury is changing.

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Galway's changing too.

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I knew a Costello would get that.

There's something like 10 people depicted in the proposal. Only one has, um, darkish skin.

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