Melrose Election Season Begins To Take Shape - Melrose, MA - We know there will be at least one new city councilor and possibly a competitive race, but there's still a lot to be hashed out before fall.
UpdatedMon, Apr 26, 2021 at 2:37 pm ET
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Resident Ernie Karelas gazes upon what someone wants to make into a two-level home at the end of Montvale Street. (Mike Carraggi/Patch)
MELROSE, MA At the end of Montvale Street, a cramped one-way near Wyoming Cemetery, stands a rock ledge adorning a long slope filled with trees.
The slope is so wide and pronounced that it is under a slope protection ordinance. The real estate listing said it was unbuildable.
Now the man who bought it wants to build on it, and the neighborhood is in an uproar.
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Armando Plato bought the plot early last year for $17,500, records show. Plans show a decidedly modern, two-level, single-family home that starts at street level and eventually hangs over what is now stone.
UpdatedThu, Apr 22, 2021 at 9:02 am ET
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(Mike Carraggi/Patch)
MELROSE, MA When Councilors Shawn MacMaster and Cory Thomas pitched their emergency order last week to require some developers to report weekly acoustic monitoring data to the city for public consumption, they said the developers were already recording the data and it would cost them nothing extra. This order was just to help the city enforce what the developers already agreed to which is keeping track of the noise coming from some larger construction projects.
But a letter from an attorney for one of the projects read at Tuesday night s City Council meeting painted a different picture. David Lucas, who represents the 99 Washington St. development, wrote providing weekly data reports for that project would cost the developer 10 times as much, saying weekly prices would increase to $2,000 and add as much as $100,000 in unanticipated costs for lengthier projects.
UpdatedMon, Apr 19, 2021 at 10:36 am ET
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This 2018 photo shows construction at 419-429 Main St., one of the major projects that have taken place in Melrose in the last few years. (Mike Carraggi/Patch)
MELROSE, MA The City Council is poised to pass an emergency order requiring many construction projects to provide noise monitoring reports to the city, which must then make the information available on its website.
The proposal from Councilors Shawn MacMaster and Cory Thomas comes after what they said have been hundreds of complaints about relentless construction noise at a time when people are working and even teaching their children at home.