Arts at the Armory is seeking changes to its existing Special Permit to allow daytime use of the building for its programs and special events in the performance hall and the cafe - including concurrent events. The meeting will be held on Wednesday, March 4 at 6 PM in the Aldermanic Chambers, 2nd Floor of Somerville City Hall located at 93 Highland Avenue.
If the Zoning Board of Appeals grants our request, it would allow us to host matinee performances for theater, dance and music as well as offer open studios, lectures, conferences and other events of community interest in the performance hall and cafe.
Your support is needed at this meeting! If you cannot attend, please send an e-mail of support to the Zoning Board of Appeals in care of Madeleine Masters at mmasters@somervillema.gov.
Questions?
Contact Debra McLaughlin or Susan Fiedler at 617.718.2191 or email us at info@artsatthearmory.org
If the Zoning Board of Appeals grants our request, it would allow us to host matinee performances for theater, dance and music as well as offer open studios, lectures, conferences and other events of community interest in the performance hall and cafe.
Your support is needed at this meeting! If you cannot attend, please send an e-mail of support to the Zoning Board of Appeals in care of Madeleine Masters at mmasters@somervillema.gov.
Questions?
Contact Debra McLaughlin or Susan Fiedler at 617.718.2191 or email us at info@artsatthearmory.org
no subject
Date: 2009-03-04 12:08 am (UTC)My experience at the time with that other project was that the bureaucrats involved had basically made up their minds in advance; one of them even told me outright, before public comment began, what the decision was going to be and what their criteria were, and it had nothing to do with anything either the builder or the neighbors cared about. (Specifically, I was told that if it had a brick facade it would be approved, and if not it would not, and that the board did not care about the size or parking concerns likely to be raised by the neighbors.) So, I have no trust of the zoning boards in this town to listen to anything anyone says in public comment.
no subject
Date: 2009-03-04 12:15 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-03-04 01:00 am (UTC)What was striking to me was that the neighbors had some very legitimate concerns, namely the size of the building, its appearance not fitting in with the character of the neighborhood (it was going to look like a big white borg cube in the middle of a neighborhood of clapboard victorians), the submitted plans having some major problems which ensured that the completed building would not be what was being approved (there were staircases that went nowhere, for example), and parking (the neighborhood already had a real problem and they were proposing a building that would make it much worse). But, all the bureaucrats cared about was brick, brick, brick. If they got their brick, the builder would get his permit. (Fortunately, I don't think he ever figured this out.) But NOBODY wanted brick but the bureaucrats. The builder didn't want to use it, and the neighbors didn't want another brick monstrosity. It was just a complete disconnect between what the neighbors wanted, and what the city cared about.
I will admit, a few of the neighbors were being irrational. They complained so bitterly about anything the builder proposed that he finally asked them what on earth they would in fact not object to him putting on the land, and they didn't actually have an answer. I understand that city employees see people like that every day and consequently learn to take some neighbor objections with a grain of salt. However, many of us, myself included, were prepared to give our blessing to a smaller, more decorous version of the project with more realistic parking space, and said so, but the city employees didn't seem to care what we had to say.
no subject
Date: 2009-03-04 02:23 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-03-04 02:53 am (UTC)I believe the building now contains a real estate office and a preschool.
no subject
Date: 2009-03-04 03:01 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-03-04 02:38 am (UTC)The only other recent building controversy I know about in this area is (not on Highland) the big condo on the community path at Willow where the developer built the roofline much higher than was allowed. (Anyone here know the end of that story? What kind of mitigation was worked out?)
At the time the Armory change-of-use conditions were being negotiated in the neighborhood, the negotiation of nearby MaxPak/KSS with its neighbors was also in full swing.