Sunderland and Montague Road branch off after intersection of Pine/Meadow/North Pleasant
The town is sponsoring an
open forum on Wednesday night seeking input about redesigning the funky intersection of five roads all converging in the North Amherst Village Center. And of course any improvement in infrastructure could lead to, gasp, increased development.
Thus the NIMBY/BANANA crowd will be out in force issuing the standard warning shot across the bow about "student housing". As in, can't have
any of that.
Form Based Zoning would have allowed denser developments in our Village Centers, exactly where the town's Master Plan said they should occur. But it was defeated -- TWICE -- in Town Meeting, although both times garnering well over a majority vote.
Only a year later the nefarious impact was felt as the state turned down our $4 million MassWorks grant proposal to rebuild Pine Street, a main thoroughfare serving North Amherst.
Pine Street connects North Amherst Village Center with "historic" Cushman Village
One of the main criteria for state grant funding is future "economic development." And without Form Based Zoning helping to stimulate that, the state decided North Amherst was not going to see a lot of development in the future, and therefor not worthy of their $4 million investment.
Although at least one developer continues to swim against the tide.
Cinda Jones went ahead anyway with the 12,000 square foot Trolley Barn, the first new mixed-use building in North Amherst in a generation. And the wider area know as
The Mill District continues to attract high end operations like Atkins Country Market.
Trolley Barn: 12,000 square foot, three-story mixed use (residential/commercial) building
But rather than subdividing a 4,000 square foot floor into smaller more efficient living quarters for additional people, because of the current antiquated zoning she can only market them as two "luxury apartments". (Or perhaps a bowling alley)
Atkins North opening in August
Even more ominously those narrow zoning defeats occurred back in the Fall of 2011 and Spring of 2012. Since then two "citizen zoning petitions" that would have effectively detonated a dirty bomb in downtown business district both garnered MORE THAN A MAJORITY of Town Meeting support this past Spring.
So whatever solutions the group discussion comes up with Wednesday evening for badly needed infrastructure improvements to North Amherst Village Center, "the dirty hands district", safe bet they go nowhere when it comes to execution.
Because our current form of government allows -- some would say "encourages" -- a minority of vociferous opponents to torpedo any meaningful development.
Cowls Building Supply celebrated 35 years in business yesterday. One of the few brights spots for North Amherst commercial activity and founding business in the Mill District.