60 Mass. App. Ct. 615 | Mass. App. Ct. | 2004
The defendant Rose Associates, Inc., proposes to develop a twelve-story office building, to be known as Two Financial Center, on a vacant parcel owned by another defendant, Sandwell, LLC,
The BRA held a public hearing to consider the developer’s c. 121A application and issued a “Report and Decision” approving the application. See St. 1960, c. 652, § 13, as appearing in St. 1965, c. 859, § 2; G. L. c. 121A, § 6. The BRA determined that “[t]he Project Area is a ‘blighted open area[’] within the meaning of Section 1 of Chapter 121A,” a necessary finding to confer c. 121A status and its tax and financing benefits. The BRA also granted zoning relief as authorized by St. 1960, c. 652, § 13, as appearing in St. 1965, c. 859, § 2, from various dimensional requirements of art. 44 of the Boston Zoning Code, covering the special overlay zoning district for the Leather District.
By an action in the nature of certiorari, the plaintiff challenged the BRA’s decision in Superior Court.
Background. The planned location for Two Financial Center is a vacant parcel of land at the corner of Essex and South Streets in Boston that is currently used as a surface parking lot for up to eighty-three vehicles. The irregularly shaped, trapezoidal parcel is approximately .44 acres and has been vacant since 1958, when existing buildings were demolished. It is located across from the forty-six story One Financial Center building and adjacent to the eleven-story Hotel Essex building. The parcel is at the northern edge of the zoning district known as the Leather District.
The original project design, consisting of a twenty-story, 277-foot high building, with 360,000 square feet of gross floor area, required “Large Project Review” under art. 80 of the Boston Zoning Code.
Following an extensive public process, the developer filed the required DPIR on March 3, 2000. The DPIR assessed the project’s impact on transportation, wind, shadow, daylight, air quality, noise, solid and hazardous wastes, water quality, storm-water management, geotechnical conditions, groundwater, historical resources and infrastructure, and proposed mitigation measures. Notably, the DPIR proposed a reduction in the size of the project to fifteen stories (205 feet) with 252,500 square feet of gross floor area.
The BRA held a public hearing on April 25, 2000, to consider the G. L. c. 121A application for Two Financial Center. The BRA issued its “Report and Decision,” also dated April 25, 2000, that approved all material aspects of the application. The BRA determined that the project “will permanently and comprehensively overcome the blighting conditions existing in the Project Area, but can only do so with the aids provided by Chapter 121 A.” The report stated that “the subsurface conditions; the high water table; the need to protect [an abutting building] with expensive slurry wall construction; the encumbrance of the Project Area by [a] storm drain and sewer easement; the small lot area; the disproportionately expensive construction cost[;] and windowless walls [] combine to make redevelopment of the Project Area unduly costly and for more than twenty years have prevented the elimination of the blighting influence of the surface parking lot through the ordinary operations of private enterprise alone.”
The BRA further determined that the “creation of a lively mixed-use development removes the blighting influence of the surface parking lot, and fills a hole in the urban fabric with an attractive building on the northern end of the Leather District.” It also determined that the project provided commercial office space “sorely needed” in the city at the time.
The BRA addressed the zoning deviations, including that the
Discussion. 1. General Laws c. 121A determination. “Chapter 121A was enacted in response to a legislative determination that the continued existence of blight and decay posed a threat to the health and safety of the inhabitants of the Commonwealth.” Boston Edison Co. v. Boston Redev. Authy., 374 Mass. 37, 45 (1977). We have held that “the clear intent of the statutes is to permit the appropriate redevelopment agency, within the broad and comprehensive guidelines delineated, to approve (or disapprove) proposed projects for any area, provided that area is found to be a ‘blighted open,’ ‘decadent,’ or ‘substandard’ area, and provided also that the proposed project meets the ‘public use’ requirement of G. L. c. 121A, § 2.” Shriners’ Hosp. for Crippled Children v. Boston Redev. Authy., 4 Mass. App. Ct. 551, 556 (1976). The BRA’s determination that a project site is
General Laws c. 121A, § 1, provides a broad and comprehensive definition of “blighted open area.” It defines a blighted open area as “a predominantly open area which is detrimental to the safety, health, morals, welfare or sound growth of a community because it is unduly costly to develop it soundly through the ordinary operations of private enterprise by reason of the existence of. . . physical conditions, or by reason of the necessity for unduly expensive excavation, fill or grading, or. . . unduly expensive foundations, retaining walls or unduly expensive measures for waterproofing ... or.. . draining ... or for the prevention of. . . flooding ... or for the protection of adjacent properties ...” (emphases added). G. L. c. 121 A, § 1. See St. 1960, c. 652, § 13, as appearing in St. 1965, c. 859, § 2. See also Benevolent & Protective Order of Elks, Lodge No. 65 v. Planning Bd. of Lawrence, 403 Mass. 531, 540 (1988) (interpreting similar language of c. 121B, § 2, court stated that statute presents “alternative definitions of a ‘blighted open area,’ ” but “area need satisfy only one of these definitions”).
The BRA conducted a careful review of the area to determine whether it was blighted, tracking the statutory requirements. The BRA found that the existing parking lot was “a predominantly open area which is detrimental to the . . . sound growth of the community because it is unduly costly to develop it soundly through the ordinary operations of private enterprise.” G. L. c. 121 A, § 1. The BRA relied on the small and irregular size of the lot
The plaintiff suggests the BRA’s articulated findings on blight are inadequate because they simply restate the language provided in the developer’s project application. This is not, however, a case in which the BRA rubber stamped the developer’s submissions or parroted statutory language. Here, “the findings . . . clearly go beyond a bare repetition of statutory language, and specific reasons underlying the [BRA’s] conclusions have been set forth.” Shriners’ Hosp. for Crippled Children v. Boston Redev. Authy., supra at 558. Contrary to the plaintiff’s assertions, the BRA’s report, and the approximately 2,000 pages of supporting documents included in the appendix, provide detailed and ample support for the BRA’s determination that the project area is a blighted open area. Although the report substantially adopted the language of the developer’s final application, this application was the end result, and in certain respects the work product, of an interactive public process led by the BRA that carefully analyzed and significantly refined the project.
We also reject the argument that the BRA simply concluded
Similarly unavailing is the plaintiff’s contention that the parcel in its present condition as a parking lot cannot be detrimental to the sound growth of the community because the Leather District as a whole is already a “vital, vibrant and prosperous” neighborhood. Although the conditions of the district as a whole are relevant, the statute is directed at the project area itself. See G. L. c. 121 A, § 1. Nothing in the statute suggests that blighted open areas cannot exist in or near otherwise vibrant neighborhoods. See generally St. 1960, c. 652 (statute not only designed for eliminating blighted conditions but also “preventing the recurrence or redevelopment of such conditions”); Dodge v. Prudential Ins. Co., 343 Mass. 375, 384 (1961) (undeveloped project area, which would be used for Prudential Center, “lies in the path of, and interferes with, the sound growth of the city”). Also, courts “will not ‘sit in review on the size of a particular project area.’ ” Shriners’ Hosp. for Crippled Children v. Boston Redev. Authy., 4 Mass. App. Ct. at 556, quoting from Berman v. Parker, 348 U.S. 26, 35 (1954).
We are also satisfied that the record supports the BRA’s
2. Zoning relief. The plaintiff argues that the BRA lacked substantial evidence to find that the zoning deviations it granted would not substantially derogate from the intent and purpose of the Boston Zoning Code or conflict with the master plan for the city.
The BRA is authorized by St. 1960, c. 652, § 13, as appearing in St. 1965, c. 859, § 2, to grant a deviation, should the proposed project contravene “any zoning, building, health or fire law, code, ordinance or regulation.” “The standard for granting [such] a zoning variance . . . , that the deviation will not substantially derogate from the intent and purposes of the zoning code, is very similar to. . . the standards for the grant of a variance from the zoning code under G. L. c. 40A, § 10. However, the power of the BRA to grant variances is less circumscribed than that of the permit granting authority under G. L. c. 40A, § 10, since the exercise of the BRA’s authority is
Article 44 of the Boston Zoning Code “establish[es] the zoning regulations for the comprehensive plan for the Leather District.” Boston Zoning Code, art. 44, § 44-1.
Here the proposed development was for commercial office space, a permissible use. Retail opportunities were also planned. The BRA determined that the project incorporated “many significant architectural elements of the Leather District,” creating a building that was “sympathetic” to the district. The Massachusetts Historical Commission determined that the project would have “no adverse effect” on the historic, architectural and cultural resources of the district. The primary deviation, and the one that is the focus of the appeal, is the scale of the building.
As emphasized by the BRA, the Two Financial Center project underwent intensive and comprehensive review and substantial reduction in height. The BRA determined that the building size and shape ultimately approved did not provide enough rentable space to be financially viable without c. 121A assistance. More
“In sum, we think that the experience of the BRA in matters involving redevelopment in the city of Boston [including the preparation and implementation of art. 44 and the Leather District Plan], coupled with the evidence before it in this case, permitted the BRA to find that the granting of these deviations would not substantially derogate from the intent and purposes of the zoning code” or conflict with the master plan for the Leather District and city. Boston Edison Co. v. Boston Redev. Authy., supra at 70.
Judgment affirmed.
We refer to Rose and Sandwell collectively as the developer.
As described in the Leather District Plan for the city dated May, 1990,
“[t]he Leather District encompasses a small piece of downtown Boston bordered on the west by the Surface Central Artery; on the south by Kneeland Street; on the north by Essex Street; and, on the east by Atlantic Avenue.” Its neighbors include Chinatown and the South Station Economic Development Area.
The BRA is vested with the authority to administer and supervise G. L. c. 121A redevelopment projects in the city, pursuant to St. 1960, c. 652, § 12.
AIthough there were eleven plaintiffs named in the complaint, only Christensen is a party to this appeal. According to the plaintiff’s appellate brief, she has “been selected by the plaintiffs as their representative on appeal.”
According to art. 80, § 80B-2(l)(a) of the Boston Zoning Code, “Large Project Review shall apply to any Proposed Project” having a gross floor area of 50,000 square feet or more. The purpose of Large Project Review is “to assess a project’s impacts on its surroundings and on City resources and to identify necessary mitigation measures.” Boston Zoning Code, art. 80, § 80B-1. Section 80B-5 of art. 80 provides the procedures for Large Project Review.
These documents were included in the record appendix.
8 The first two stories of the building feature columns and windows characteristic of Leather District architecture. The street wall rises straight up from the sidewalk line.
9 Comices are molded and projecting architectural features on buildings, often at the roof lines, see Webster’s Third New Intl. Dictionary 508 (1993), but in this case, also used to create a visual break where the upper floors of the building are set back twenty feet along South Street.
10 The primary entrance to the proposed building would be located in an angled comer bay.
11 The Massachusetts Historical Commission also determined that the project will have “no adverse effect” on the historic, architectural, and cultural resources” of the Leather District.
The report found that “[a] building with a small footprint requires more expensive exterior wall and window construction and maintenance in proportion to the volume of space which it encloses.” It also found that the “percentage of the total footprint of each floor in the Project which must be dedicated to . . . elevators and egress stairs — and to bathrooms and utility rooms . . . is higher than a substantial portion of the first class office space in the City.”
The height of the adjacent historic Hotel Essex building, which would share a wall with the proposed project, also meant that there would be no windows for most of one side of the proposed building, thereby affecting its rental value.
We also note that the site abuts the South Station Urban Renewal Project, “a comparatively large area previously found by the [BRA] to be a blighted
The Leather District Plan is separate from, and more conceptual than, art. 44. It is the height restriction in art. 44 that raises the significant issue here.
The BRA allowed deviations from the following sections of art. 44 of the Boston Zoning Code: Section 44-5: As-of-Right Building Height and Floor Area Ratio; Section 44-7: Specific Design Requirements; Section 44-8: Leather District Design Guidelines; and Section 44-10: Leather District Use Regulations.