why is construction at Elm and Chester streets taking so long?

Aug 11, 2014 14:13

Does anyone know why it is taking so long to repair the exterior of the building at Elm and Chester streets? The scaffolding has been up since last November, causing the MBTA to move the bus stop down to in front of Anna's Tacqueria. The Dunkin Donuts is probably losing some business from people who can't tell whether it's actually open, or who ( Read more... )

development, local landscape

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achinhibitor August 11 2014, 19:20:10 UTC
I've noticed that a lot of construction projects proceed fitfully. I don't know much about the business, but I've been told that some of it has to do with the slowness of getting insurance companies to approve the needed work. I'd also guess that renovation and fix-up work is intrinsically more complicated but doesn't involve huge amounts of money, so it's not particularly attractive for a construction company.

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mindstalk August 12 2014, 00:17:03 UTC
I noted that Gourmet Express in Porter has been closed but not yet demolished. Or had much of anything visible happen.

I have no idea how long it takes to fix a fallen facade, a la Zoe's & Mixtura, but I didn't think it would take nearly that long.

Or two months to renovate an escalator in the Porter Square station. (Which then wasn't working again Saturday.) Or a year for the elevator, though a deep underground elevator seems more likely to be problematic.

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ron_newman September 15 2014, 17:23:39 UTC
Gourmet Express was finally demolished within the past few days.

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mindstalk September 15 2014, 17:32:20 UTC
So I noticed! But thanks.

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construction? mattdm August 11 2014, 19:48:41 UTC
Is there any sign of any construction at all? I assumed that they just did the minimum necessary to reduce the risk of pedestrian death, and that it's now sitting in that state until someone comes up with some actual money to repair.

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RE: construction? teko August 11 2014, 19:59:41 UTC
To my knowledge, no actual construction work has been done whatsoever. My assumption was that whoever actually ended up moving into that space -- a gym, grocery store, etc -- would take responsibility for that construction work as part of the rehab. Beer Works had planned to do so, but, well, here we are with scaffolding.

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