0 Boston Harbor Garage Towers Get The Red Light

As it stands now the city and state are at a no vote for the Harbor Garage development of 2 skyscrapers.

Boston Harbor garage plan

Credit: Bostino

From Banker and Tradesman:

A state official dealt a blow to Chiofaro Cos.’ plans to build two skyscrapers on Boston Harbor, siding with city officials in setting a maximum size of 900,000 square feet and height of 600 feet…Matthew Beaton, the secretary of energy and environmental affairs, backed the Boston Redevelopment Authority’s guidance for the maximum buildout on the 1.3-acre parcel currently occupied by an eight-story parking garage. Developer Donald Chiofaro has stated that his original proposal for two towers totaling 1.3 million square feet is the minimum for a financially viable project.

0 Boston Officials Mull Seaplane Service in Boston Harbor

Seaplane flys over harbor and office buildings

Credit: Kenmoreair

Seaplanes in Boston Harbor?  Well this could be one of the new commuter services being embraced by the city leadership.

According to a Boston Business Journal report, “Boston’s top economic development official said Thursday that the city will launch a waterfront planning effort intended to bring more programming and public access to the harbor while also opening the potential for commercial seaplane service in the years ahead…A waterfront plan would likely join with Imagine Boston 2030, the city’s first comprehensive master plan in the past five decades. It also comes during a construction boom throughout Boston, particularly throughout the South Boston waterfront.

You can read the full BBJ article on its website.

0 Checking in on Boston’s Innovation Economy

cambridge co working office space

WeWork Cambridge

Success and failures is measured more clearly with the benefit of time. Have a peak at how the innovative economy has performed in recent history on BetaBoston:

[Boston] startups [collected] $7.4 billion in funding this year — a 30 percent jump from 2014…[and] higher than any year since 2000, when dot-com mania pushed investment in Massachusetts startups above $10 billion, according to the financial data provider PitchBook. A single company in Cambridge, Moderna Therapeutics, announced a $450 million funding roundback in January — the biggest private funding infusion for a biotech startup ever.

0 Monorail Proposed in Boston

Aerial view of the greenway in downtown Boston

Credit: Boston Herald

We have worked so hard to suppress the central artery I’m not too sure it makes sense to litter it with a monorail.

From the Boston Herald:

Minnesota-based JPods has proposed bringing their solar-powered gondola pods to Boston and Somerville, an idea that caught the attention of former city councilor Steve Murphy, who liked them for the Greenway.

JPods are among a category of vehicle called personal rapid transit, a network of small, solar-powered automated vehicles that operate on specially built guideways. They’ve been tested — in different forms — everywhere from New Zealand to Abu Dhabi and even installed in Heathrow Airport to ferry travelers from Terminal 5 to the long-term car park. The expansion of these projects always seems to end with the conclusion that they don’t move a high enough volume of people for the considerable cost. It’s just the type of problem Boston’s innovators could take on.

0 Seaport’s Northern Ave. Bridge in it’s last Months

Seaport Northern Ave Bridge

Credit: Boston Magazine

The Northern Ave. Bridge is scheduled to come down in March. The bridge site is now the gateway to the Seaport, which continues to grow with the recent announcement of GE’s election to move its HQ to the thriving Boston submarket.

From Boston Magazine:

The rusty, sad structure that links downtown to the Seaport is set to be removed in March. But the Northern Ave Bridge wasn’t always such a rickety construction; it became a grand throughway across the Fort Point Channel after it was built in 1908. It’s also one of the remaining few swing bridges in Boston, meaning that it pivots when traffic in the water below needs to pass by.

The steel bridge was closed to vehicles in 1997—and recently to pedestrians in December 2014—after the Coast Guard asserted it was hazardous to cross and in danger of collapsing. The bridge’s demolition seems unfortunate, since the aged platform boasts a distinctive history.

 

0 Fenway Getting “Big Air Jump” in Feb

Fenway Boston

Credot: Bisnow

Fenway Park is far more than just home to the Red Sox. It has evolved to a park that hosts many event from concerts to hockey, and now, a Big Air Jump.

According to Bisnow, “Fenway Park’s Big Air Jump is being assembled (all 26,000 pieces) for its big day on Feb. 11 and 12. And when the estimated 25,000 people stream in, the jump will be even taller than the originally announced figure, according to BostInno. The structure reaches 150 feet high and 338 feet long.”

You can read more about Fenway’s Big Air Jump on Bisnow.

 

0 Synergy Investments Sells Class B Portfolio

Credit: Boston Business Journal

Credit: Boston Business Journal

Value in the Class B market continues to be achieved with Synergy’s sale of a 4 building portfolio.

According to Bizjournals.com, the four-property portfolio spans a combined 237,434 square feet and was acquired for an average of $379 per square foot, up by $143 from the $236 per square foot paid by Synergy and GreenOak.”

The BBJ continued, noting “the deal is the latest in a wave of local Class B transactions. For example, Webster-based property insurer Mapfre Insurance bought One Winthrop Square in October for $55 million with plans to move some executive offices there. Boston-based commercial real estate firm Winhall Cos. bought Two Liberty Square in September for $28.25 million, up more than $10 million from the $18 million the property had traded for in January 2013. And New York-based DLJ Real Estate Capital Partners in October accquired 18 Tremont St. for $77.5 million.”
You can read the full article on the BBJ’s website, here.

0 Boston’s MBTA: Least Reliable Transit System in the U.S.

Boston commuters wait for the MBTA train

Credit: BBJ

Boston takes another 1st position in the nation, this is not a positive, however, this is The T!

Our beloved MBTA is dead last with the most breakdowns in the U.S. We are an educated Commonwealth, but we really need to get smart about how we expect our workforce to commute without operational issues beyond their control.

According to a recent article on the Boston Business Journal, “the MBTA recorded 219 major mechanical failures on its commuter rail lines in 2014 — four times the national average. (Notably, the data did not include breakdowns last year during the record-setting snowfall in January and February)…Nationally, 24 commuter railroads had an average 52 major failures in 2014.”

0 Boston Office Market Shows Strength in 2015

Boston office market trends

Credit: Boston Real Estate Times

The region’s office market continued its upward push with rents climbing while vacancy continues to decline.

A Boston Real Estate Times article includes the following highlights to express the market direction:

  • Market-wide vacancy averaged 12.2 percent for 2015, the lowest annual average since 2002. Vacancy for the quarter remained steady from third quarter at 12.1 percent.
  • Class A asking lease rates topped $42 per square foot for the first time since 2002, reaching $42.06 in fourth quarter, 3.9 percent higher than first-quarter 2015.
  • Boston’s Central Business District had 502,000 square feet of absorption in fourth quarter and totaled 1.58 million square feet for the year, the highest annual total since 2006.
  • Vacancy in Boston’s Seaport District dropped to 8.3 percent, its lowest level since 2000, when inventory was 6 million square feet smaller than today.
  • Cambridge closed the quarter at a remarkable 2.7 percent vacancy, its lowest mark on record.
  • There was 314,000 square feet of positive absorption in the Route 128 submarkets and 328,000 square feet in the Interstate 495 submarkets.

 

0 Wayfair’s Chic Boston Office Space Reflects its Core Products

Wayfair HQ

Credit: Boston.com

Wayfair has come to the market with creative radio and TV ads and changed the traditional office environment from cubes and offices into collaborative environment for its ever expanding workforce.

From Boston.com:

With names like “Nordic,” “Safari,” “Whimsy,” and “Cat Tree,” each room at Wayfair’s headquarters at 4 Copley Place is themed to remind employees of a motif or product the rapidly expanding company sells. While “Safari” might feature zebra-print rugs and exotic throw pillows, employees working in “Cat Tree” get to enjoy a slightly quirkier office vibe with avocado-colored wallpaper covered in playful cats.

“We have all these smaller spaces set up to look like actual living rooms using the furniture we actually sell,” said Jess Merrell, event marketer for Wayfair. “That way everything feels more comfortable to get things done. We don’t have to go to Starbucks to have a private conversation.”