
These circa 2014 rendering show plans for Tremont Crossing’s mixed use development.

After 12 years, developers say they’re close to assembling necessary funding
Twelve years after
development rights were granted to Elma Lewis Partners, LLC,
construction is set to begin in April on Parcel P-3 in Roxbury, to be
known as Tremont Crossing, the projects developers say.
The
7.25-acre Roxbury property on Tremont Street, across from the Boston
Police headquarters, is set to become a mixed-use development with a
shopping mall, 727 residential units, office space, a parking garage and
a museum containing art by African American artists.
Elma
Lewis Partners and Feldco Development, which joined the project in
2010, said Jan. 31 in a presentation to the Boston Planning and
Development Agency that they are just $28 million away from the $473
million needed for the project. They expect to close on the final
funding in March, as well as go before the Boston Zoning Commission to
get approval for the plan and sign a lease for a large retail tenant.
Elma Lewis Partners, which includes members of the Museum of the National Center for Afro-American Artists (NCAAA), founded
by the late Elma Lewis, began plans for the project in 2007 under Mayor
Thomas Menino. Since then, the project has hit multiple barriers,
beginning with the financial collapse in 2008.
While the original proposal
for Tremont Crossing was filed in 2011, Menino pushed for the property
to become the new headquar- ters of Partners Healthcare, and former
Governor Deval Patrick advocated for locating the state Department of
Transportation headquarters there. Both deals fell through, and Partners
built its headquarters in Assembly Row in Somerville, opening in 2016.
In
2015, Elma Lewis Partners and Feldco proposed a student housing
complex, which met fierce opposition from the community, local elected
officials and the Roxbury Strategic Masterplan Oversight Committee.
With
the current and final plan, the team had to seek multiple extensions
from the BPDA on the project to sign leases with retail tenants, but the
proposal was finally approved last year.
The proposal
In the presentation to the BPDA, the development team outlined a plan which would transform face of Tremont Street.
The museum will be on the third floor of the retail portion of the projquality along
with a cinema, a Planet Fitness gym and a rock-climbing gym. Other
retail tenants include gym. Other retail tenants include gym. Other
retail tenants include a BJ’s wholesale “store, CVS Pharmacy,
Burlington Coat Factory and other stores and restaurants. Of the all 727
residential units, which include two towers
and a row of townhouses on Whittier Street, 145, or approximately 20
percent, will be marked as affordable, and restricted to tenants making
60 to 100 percent of the Area Median Income. The city normally requires
developers to designate 13 percent of housing units affordable.
The team also expects the project
to
construction
jobs over the 30-month construction projquality
period,
which will be completed by Consigli Construction
in
collaboration with Janey Construction. They also expect another 1,569
permanent jobs to be available between the office, retail, residential
and museum portions of the project.