May. 26th, 2016

[identity profile] jbcampbe.livejournal.com
Greetings Davisonians!

You may have heard rumors about the proposed West Branch Library Renovation Project and the tree and garden destruction it would involve. Here’s an overview of what’s going on:

The West Branch of the Somerville Public Library is in drastic need of renovation. All agree on that. However, the current project design also calls for the paving over of the gardens presently surrounding the building, replacing them with a “low-maintenance plaza space,” and the construction of a meeting room extension onto the existing building. Here is a link to the design plans:

http://www.somervillema.gov/sites/default/files/160229_Somerville%20WBL%20Community%20Meeting_FINAL.pdf

The plans for the present garden areas are disturbing. Over the decades, the Somerville Garden Club (which is not associated in any way with this opposition) has designed and maintained lovely gardens around the library and has planted several significant trees, including Somerville’s only Dawn Redwood, two Columnar Beeches, and a Fernleaf Beech, among others. All are rare and mature and are great landscape features.

The current design plan would remove all of these trees.

The proposed plan also raises a number of other issues:

First: it flies in the face of the City of Somerville’s policy of maintaining and acquiring new open green spaces. The past 20–30 years have been significant in the history of the city. The advocacy for green spaces, street trees, and gardening under Mike Capuano’s and Joe Curtatone’s terms as progressive mayors who actively encouraged the development of public green spaces and private gardens, has been a glorious period of renewal. Their advocacy of gardening contests and awards and their hiring of a city Senior Planner/Landscape Developer to help implement green plans and acquire new green areas have been tremendously revitalizing throughout the city.

All of these changes—including the development of the West and Main Branches of the Library—are as valuable a part of Somerville’s history as are the historical monuments and homes. These sites deserve preservation, and not an opportunistic “update” of a site which is a monument to the best changes brought about during the past years of Somerville history. The West Branch Library building was designed by McLean and Wright of Boston, and was built in 1906–09 with funding from philanthropist Andrew Carnegie and the city. It is the city’s best example of Classical Revival architecture, also exhibiting Beaux Arts details that were then in fashion. It was the first branch library in Somerville .

Second: the projected concrete plaza area would not be low maintenance, as claimed, but would, rather, be much higher maintenance than the gardens have been. There are mulberry trees on adjacent lots that would cause considerable mess. And most of the garden maintenance is done by SGC members, aside from occasional mowing.

Third: the projected plaza would be redundant, since there is already a nicely paved plaza area across the street from the Rite Aid on Highland Ave.

Fourth: the tax burden ($6–8 million) would be substantial, especially at a time when the Green Line Extension and Somerville High School projects are placing additional tax stress on residents.

Fifth: the addition of a meeting/performance space intended to accommodate a hundred people would mean that dozens of people at once would need parking in the Davis Square area. Yes, the Red Line is right there, but many people don’t use the T and/or would be coming from other directions. Traffic and parking problems are already severe in the Davis area—we don’t need more.


Members of the Somerville and Davis Square communities in general and the library property abutters in particular are all opposed to the current design. All parties are in favor of renovations to the existing building—and would be happy to see additional funding granted to upgrade the library’s services. But we oppose any other alterations, except insofar as are needed to make the existing building ADA compliant.

We do appreciate the need for more meeting and performance space in Somerville. But the proposed addition wouldn’t even be good for these, since they would be squeezed into a site not fit for the purpose. Further cramming of the small library lot, increased parking demand, and a considerable tax burden on the residents of Somerville (just at the time when we’re about to be whacked with Green Line and High School project expenses)—all for a project of dubious value that the people don’t really want—all seem like a no-go.

The City Aldermen have received a great many emails and phone calls on this subject, and a community meeting has been scheduled for:

Wednesday June 1, 2016 @ 7:00 pm
TAB Building – 169 Holland Street. Second Floor

This meeting will review and discuss the renovation and scope of library program services in the historic structure. There will be discussion of the community’s preferred landscape alternative. The meeting will discuss the scale and viability of the proposed community room addition. The ultimate objective is a project that meets the goals outlined by the community and garners the support of direct project abutters.


Additionally, people who are interested in this issue should:

1. Make sure they’re on Steve Vitello’s (the Project Manager’s) email list (by calling or emailing him at svitello@somervillema.gov 617-625-6600 x5124).

2. Join the Facebook page created by Janet Campbell on this issue. (https://www.facebook.com/groups/120522718357131/)

3. Join the Google Group moderated by Ulysses Lateiner and Janet Campbell. (https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/somerville-west-branch-library-renovation).

We’ll make sure you’re up to date on what’s going on!
[personal profile] ron_newman
The owners of the Gorin Building at 255 Elm Street have sued the owners of Found, a used-clothing consignment shop that closed at the end of January.

The suit alleges that Found owes $21,981.42 in unpaid back rent, that they abandoned the property leaving it in "disarray", and that they broke their lease which obligates them to pay rent through the end of August 2017. ($9472.50/month through 8/31/16, then $9804.03/month through 8/31/17)

So far, this sounds like an ordinary business dispute, but the landlord also twice cites my January 28 post to DSLJ:

COUNT III: Fraudulent Transfer
20. Upon information and belief, the defendants are seeking to use the funds and assets of the defendant Found to start a new company or to establish Found in another location. (See Davis Square Live Journal, dated January 28, 2016, attached hereto as Exhibit "C")

and
COUNT V: Slander/Defamation - Fred Bennett
29. Upon information and belief, on or about January 28, 2016, while in the process of abandoning the Premises, defendant Fred Bennett told a third-party that the plaintiff was "a greedy jerk who jacked up the rent, and is not a good person." (See Exhibit C)

30. The statement by Bennett is factually untrue.

31. Additional comments on the community webpage attached as Exhibit C demonstrate that such defamatory words of defendant Fred Bennett held the plaintiff up to contempt, hatred, scorn, or ridicule or tended to impair his standing in the community, at least to his discredit in the minds of a considerable and respectable class in the community.


I became aware of this lawsuit when a representative from Safety Insurance Company came to my door at 12:55 pm on Tuesday afternoon, May 24. He wanted me to sign an affidavit stating that I made the DSLJ post cited above, and asked me some questions about the appearance of the person whom I quoted in that post. I declined to sign the affidavit, which was my right, but the Safety rep said that this may result in me being subpoenaed as a witness.

He told me that the owners of Found had cancelled their insurance policy the same day as my DSLJ post, and he was very interested in determining whether Fred Bennett had cancelled the policy before or after making the statement quoted above.

If anyone wants to follow along, the case number is 1681CV00413, Misujo Realty LLC vs Davis Square Consignment, LLC Doing Business as Found, Fred Bennett, Meredith Bennett, Defendants, and Eastern Bank NA, Trustee Defendant. The complaint was filed in Middlesex Superior Court which is located in Woburn. You can follow the status of the case by filling out this form, but the content of the filed documents is not online. So far, the defendants have not answered the complaint. Their deadline for doing so is June 15.
[identity profile] bobobb.livejournal.com
Some vinyl siding fell off of my house on Rogers Ave. I'm assuming it just tumbled into the street. It's a long shot, but thought I'd check to see if someone had seen it. If not, any recommendations of places I can get a replacement?
[personal profile] ron_newman
The Davis Square Symphony, originally scheduled for a June 17 outdoor performance, will not happen at that time. The composer and organizer, Roger Miller, writes:

A large enough orchestra was not able to be procured. The nature of the composition - each vehicle requiring 2 string players - was such that a certain amount of players was needed to make it come to pass.

I am pursuing the alternate route of putting a hi-fi MIDI Orchestra onto the film, making it able to be shown with full score anywhere any time. So the idea of the film w/music is still there, just the live orchestra was not able to come to pass. Not as good, but still the concept will be manifest.

See Roger Miller's update.

Profile

davis_square: (Default)
The Davis Square Community

April 2025

S M T W T F S
  12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930   

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated May. 23rd, 2025 08:15 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios