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a communication from Councillor Carlone transmitting his comments on the Alewife Urban Design

From City Clerk Donna P. Lopez·Council meeting Jan 14, 2019·6 pages·📄 Original PDF (city portal)
CITY HALL, CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS 02139 TEL: [phone removed] FAX: [phone removed] | TTY/TDD: [phone removed] | EMAIL: dcarlone@cambridgema.gov CAMBRIDGE CITY COUNCIL Dennis Carlone City Councillor January 10, 2019 Dear City Clerk Lopez: Please include this attachment regarding Alewife Urban Design in the Communications and Reports From Other City Offices for the January 14 City Council meeting. Thank you. Dennis Carlone Cambridge City Council.
Alewife Urban Design Neighborhood & Long Term Planning, Public Facilities, Arts & Celebration Committee Chair/Councillor Carlone Design Review Comments and Recommendations, December 18, 2018 1 Alewife Urban Design Presentation - Design Review Comments Neighborhood & Long Term Planning, Public Facilities, Arts & Celebration Committee Chair/Councillor Carlone Design Review Comments and Recommendations INTRODUCTION Recently the Neighborhood & Long Term Planning* Committee met to review the City’s Envision Plan, including the proposed Alewife Urban Design Plan. My recommendations, found on pages 2-5, include specific design refinements and additions to more directly reflect City Council Goals (1-7 and 10 highlighted below) that relate to future planning and development initiatives. Any urban design plan and its resulting build-out affect the entire city and region either positively or negatively. Just as opportunities should be maximized, constraints must be fully addressed. CITY COUNCIL GOALS, 2017 1. Increase access to affordable housing for all income groups. 2. Ensure that Cambridge offers economic and educational opportunity [in particular Pre- Kindergarten programs] to all. 3. Deepen our commitment to sustainable use of energy and strengthen our capacity for resilience. 4. Expand and deepen community engagement [with necessary social infrastructure]. 5. Develop more proactive, inclusive, and transparent city planning process. 6. Make it easy to move safely through the City, especially by sustainable modes of transportation. 7. Increase opportunities for all residents to enjoy the City’s open spaces. 8. Ensure that Cambridge remains an Innovation Hub that integrates businesses of all sizes into a thriving ecosystem. 9. Improve Council’s capacity to collaborate more effectively, make better decisions, and increase its accountability to the public. 10. Ensure City’s budget allocates resources responsibly and responsively. 11. Ensure Public Safety efforts reflect current and emerging challenges and opportunities in a way that incorporates Cambridge’s core values. 12. Eliminate Bias within the City workplace and wider community. * Neighborhood & Long Term Planning, Public Facilities, Arts, & Celebration Committee
Alewife Urban Design Neighborhood & Long Term Planning, Public Facilities, Arts & Celebration Committee Chair/Councillor Carlone Design Review Comments and Recommendations, December 18, 2018 2 Alewife Urban Design Presentation - Design Review Comments Neighborhood & Long Term Planning, Public Facilities, Arts & Celebration Committee Chair/Councillor Carlone Design Review Comments and Recommendations Envision: Urban Form Recommendations Hearing, November 29, 2018 Cambridge Community Development Urban Design Plan OVERVIEW (CITY COUNCIL GOAL 5) Community Development’s updated plan, a significant improvement over the previous Envision plan, incorporates many of the concepts highlighted by the Envision community process and a number of City Council public policies. However, there are unmet public policy issues and implementation aspects that need to be more fully addressed including the Quadrangle’s isolation, lack of social infrastructure, housing and transportation concerns, environmental needs, and as highlighted below. URBAN CONNECTIONS (CITY COUNCIL GOALS 3, 6, AND 10) 1. Necessary Connections to Redline Station and Triangle: The Quadrangle’s development viability and future livability are linked to the quality of its connections to the surrounding area, which is presently minimal. The plan includes one pedestrian and bicycle bridge over the railroad tracks. Unless this bridge incorporates a bus shuttle system, public access will be greatly limited for at least 3-4 months due to winter weather. Given the Quadrangle’s large size, a second bridge should connect to Smith Place, the area’s logical main street. Two bridges increase the likelihood of a successful shuttle-bus system linking the Red Line and Triangle to the Quad and nearby Cambridge Highlands.
Alewife Urban Design Neighborhood & Long Term Planning, Public Facilities, Arts & Celebration Committee Chair/Councillor Carlone Design Review Comments and Recommendations, December 18, 2018 3 2. Future Commuter Rail Station: The area's development will justify a regional commuter rail station on the existing rail right-of-way. The most likely station location is adjacent to and between the existing Fresh Pond Parkway Bridge and the city proposed pedestrian [and shuttle] bridge. The station will provide the MBTA with at least one significant air rights development. Both opportunities should be included in the plan. 3. Concord Avenue: A coordinated system of Concord Avenue traffic lights at two block intervals are required for the Quadrangle & Environs to have safe and clear pedestrian and bicycle access south to the adjacent Fresh Pond Reservation. BALANCE OF LAND USES (CITY COUNCIL GOALS 1, 2, 4, 5, AND 10) 4. Use Projections: Cambridge’s past emphasis on commercial development over residential development inadvertently helped create the current scarcity of housing resulting in dramatic rent and purchasing cost increases over the last 20 years. Although the City Council has emphasized a greater priority for new housing, Community Development earlier presentations indicated a development goal of 60% commercial and 40% residential square footage, which match the 1990’s strategies for Kendall Square and Cambridge Crossing. The most recent urban design plan appears to propose even greater commercial (industrial/office uses) density than previously stated. What are the actual square footage projections of each basic use as shown in the plan: residential, office, industrial, institutional, public space, and roads and ways? 5. Social Infrastructure/Civic Needs: Local libraries, schools, and playing fields create a social fabric and sense of identity that foster casual interaction in every Cambridge neighborhood. The Envision process has also indicated a growing need for a new school (800 students) and pre-Kindergarten facilities within ten years. However, the urban design plan incorporates none of these civic necessities. Where will teenagers and adolescents play safely after school? Where can they and the elderly go in bad weather? An isolated neighborhood needs its own social resources -- or will fail as a community. TRANSPORTATION IMPACTS (CITY COUNCIL GOALS 3, 5, AND 6) 6. Congestion Reality and Its Relationship to Building Use Type: Given Alewife’s serious traffic concerns and the planned emphasis on office development (which we know creates 3 to 4 times greater traffic impacts than equivalently sized residential projects), the city must plan and build with increased urgency and responsibility. This means significantly increasing the amount of residential development and implementing the necessary, major transit improvements highlighted above. Otherwise, area residents and employees will neither easily enter or leave their neighborhood, nor feel part of the greater Cambridge community.
Alewife Urban Design Neighborhood & Long Term Planning, Public Facilities, Arts & Celebration Committee Chair/Councillor Carlone Design Review Comments and Recommendations, December 18, 2018 4 GREEN DESIGN AND OPEN SPACE SYSTEM (CITY COUNCIL GOALS 3, 5, 6, AND 7) 7. Design Strategy and Detailed Calculation: The proposed plan consists of two residential scaled open spaces (one appropriately at each side of Smith Place) and a diagonally oriented linear park, which connects the proposed pedestrian bridge to Concord Avenue at the Smith Place intersection. While these three public spaces show well-designed intent, they are not an adequate amount and kinds of open spaces needed for such a large district cut off from surrounding open space systems and playfields. Furthermore, it appears that most of the planned commercial properties are not depicted with adjacent open space as previously recommended by staff. The greatest number of proposed trees appears to be street trees. What standards are being considered to enhance street tree viability? Finally, what is the percentage of porous versus non-porous coverage in the plan? Given the propensity for flooding, a greater amount of water retention open space and tree cover is required. 8. Diagonal Linear Park: Most, if not all, successful linear parks are bordered at least on one side by an active public access road, providing an informal means of security. The Fenway in Boston is a nearby example for such a bordering public road. This could be a low-speed, one-way road given the overly tight width of the proposed open space. 9. Green or Solar Panel Roof: Given the area’s environmental sensitivity, new buildings should incorporate a green roof (water retention, insulation and communal needs) or a solar energy system to offset the building’s negative impacts on carbon generation. A community solar array would satisfy this requirement. URBAN DESIGN STRUCTURE (CITY COUNCIL GOALS 4, AND 6) 10. Street Pattern and Block Size: The proposed residential areas have an appropriate fine-grain street pattern in the spirit of Cambridge. However, the northwest industrial/office sector has supersized blocks (as large as 350’ x 1000’) that need to be broken down in scale to integrate better with the residential blocks. Fortunately, the drawn access right-of-ways through these large blocks can easily become public streets to make this sector less office park-like and more urban, resulting in virtually the same amount of development. 11. Retail/Main Street Location: All existing Cambridge retail districts are on main travel roads with multiple intersecting secondary streets. Previous city presentations highlighted Wilson Road (approximately 700 feet north of and parallel to Concord Avenue) as the Quadrangle’s retail street. However, Smith Place with its direct connection/access to heavily travelled Concord Avenue and the potential second bridge over the railroad tracks to Cambridgepark Drive on the north, is a significantly more viable retail/neighborhood
Alewife Urban Design Neighborhood & Long Term Planning, Public Facilities, Arts & Celebration Committee Chair/Councillor Carlone Design Review Comments and Recommendations, December 18, 2018 5 services street with a greater number of street connections. Future buildings on Concord at Smith Place should include retail to help announce this street to passers-by. 12. Alewife Square: This proposed public space located between Fresh Pond Parkway and Danehy Park appears to be more like an office park green then a city square and should be redesigned. An urban retail node and square should better reflect that intent. There are excellent examples of similar, successful developments. 13. Scale of Development Adjacent to Sancta Maria Facility: Although it is appropriate to have smaller residential development immediately abutting existing Cambridge Highlands residences, Concord Avenue sites next to Sancta Maria (which itself is a buffer to the neighborhood) requires a more dense/urban scale of housing similar to other proposed buildings on the Avenue. PUBLIC INFRASTRUCTURE NEEDS AND GOALS (CITY COUNCIL GOALS 5, AND 10) 14. Public Works and Fire Departments: Both departments have lacked sufficient facilities for years. City officials considered purchasing land in the northwest of the quadrangle for a new Public Works center and Fire Department training center. Given the large amount of land presently under control by a few key developers, serious efforts should still be undertaken to incorporate these public needs. A district fire station should be considered through negotiation prior to and during the Special Permit process. CONCLUDING COMMENTS AND NEXT STEPS (CITY COUNCIL GOAL 5) A great opportunity exists in the Quadrangle & Environs and no one wants to repeat the past mistakes of the nearby Triangle with its disjointed development, dead-end street pattern, traffic congestion, insufficient public domain and lack of public activity. The most current urban design plan is a major step forward, but needs to be more responsive and enhanced. The above urban design recommendations will hasten the transformation of the area to best reflect public goals and needs, which build on making Alewife a desirable and memorable part of Cambridge. 15. Additional Questions: A number of important questions still remain. Who are the key landowner/developers in the area and what land do they own? What are their stated interests and plans? What are the proposed Design Review Standards and Process? If the city does not lead the effort, how will developers contribute to building all needed civic infrastructure and amenities? Respectfully submitted, Dennis Carlone