Boston College High School, a private Catholic school serving 1,500 students, last week submitted plans to city officials for a wellness complex on its Morrissey Boulevard/Columbia Point campus that will be attached to the existing McNeice gym and linked to Cadigan Hall, which first opened in 2014 and spans 28,000 square feet. The two-story addition will take up 42,000 square
Kosciuszko Circle, named for the Polish hero who fought for the US in the American Revolution, is one of the region’s most despised rotaries, a scene of relentless turmoil as vehicles converge there from I-93, Columbia Road, Old Colony Avenue, and Morrissey and Day boulevards and try to move on their way in varying directions from inside the circle.
There’s a lot of buzz in the neighborhood at the moment about the latest churn of development decisions being weighed by city officials, and to some extent, with the advice and consent of residents themselves. It can be a lot to absorb in one sitting let alone in multiple volumes of this newspaper so let’s take a step back and review a few of the more pressing decisions that
Developers who are steering two large projects in Dorchester have signed on as advisers to Mayor Michelle Wu as she seeks to overhaul the city’s development process. Wu on Friday announced the members of an advisory committee focused on the “Article 80” review process for development in the city. Adopted by the city’s zoning commission in 1996, Article 80 lays out requirements