A range of options for re-designing the Morrissey Boulevard corridor were presented at a public meeting of the Morrissey Boulevard Commission on Thursday night (May 2) at Boston College High School in front of a crowd of roughly 70 people, with another 50 participating virtually. The Morrissey Commission was formed by state law last year to devise a plan to redesign Morrissey
The third meeting of the Morrissey Boulevard-K Circle Commission is slated for this Thursday, May 2 at BC High from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Jake Wachman, state Sen. Nick Collins’ designee on the commission, urged the public to attend or log-in virtually. “This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to shape the future of the Morrissey corridor and Dorchester waterfront,” Wachman said.
Members of the Columbia-Savin Hill Civic Association voted to support the potential change of occupancy certification from two to three units at 20 Pearl Street at Monday’s general membership meeting. James Christopher, the principal manager of 686 Architects, said at the meeting that the building has been taxed as a three-family unit since 2011, even though only two
Concerns about the lack of progress made by a state-run commission charged with planning improvements to the Morrissey Boulevard corridor filled the air at Monday evening’s meeting of the Columbia-Savin Hill Civic Association (CSHCA). The group, which meets on the first Monday of each month, voted to create a new Government Affairs committee to track developments related to
The Columbia Savin Hill Civic Association on Monday voted to accept a $750,000 donation from a real estate development team that is intent on building out a campus of mixed-use buildings on Morrissey Boulevard over the next decade. The money would come from Centre Court LLC, which won approval from city planners last month to build a seven-building campus at 35-75 Morrissey