Massachusetts Renewable Energy Trust Grants
Urban Edge
$500,000
CDC to Integrate Eco-Design into Egleston
Crossing
May 12, 2003 -- The Massachusetts Technology Collaborative
(MTC) awarded NeighborWorks organization Urban Edge $500,000 to
implement "green building" concepts into the design
and construction of Egleston Crossing, the developer’s 64-unit
mixed use project due for completion in 2004. The Green Building
Initiative is part of a $47 million-dollar strategic plan funded
by the Commonwealth to spur the shift of energy consumption in
Massachusetts from conventional energy sources to those generated
by renewable resources.
"As a community based development organization we are cognizant
of the local to global impacts of our development efforts,"
says Noah Maslan, project manager for Egleston Crossing. "Green
building and design elements coincide with the mission of our
organization."
This grant will allow Urban Edge to cut the building’s
energy demand by nearly 50% by incorporating solar energy, utilizing
environmentally sensitive materials and other energy efficient
building design. Egleston Crossing is a mixed-use brownfield redevelopment
project located in the heart of Egleston Square. It is the next
phase of a comprehensive revitalization strategy led by Urban
Edge in the Egleston/Jackson neighborhoods of Roxbury and Jamaica
Plain. Two vacant lots located on underutilized will be razed
this June to make way for two new buildings that will include
8,300 square feet of ground floor commercial space plus 64 new
units of affordable housing, 15 of which will be dedicated to
formerly homeless individuals and families through a unique collaboration
with Pine Street Inn.
Urban Edge has teamed with ICON Architecture, SAR Engineering,
McPhail Associates and others to pursue an integrated design approach
that will result in a "greener" project consistent
with the U.S. Green Building Council’s Leader in Energy
and Environmental Design (LEED) guidelines. With this grant,
Urban Edge will be able to put those ideas into action to attain
renewable energy, energy efficiency, and sustainable design objectives.
"Our recognition of these global impacts can be seen in
our commitment to revitalizing urban neighborhoods, reactivating
brownfield sites, being sensitive to the disproportionate rates
of asthma in the population we serve, and making it our priority
to reduce the dependence on conventional energy in order to lower
the energy cost burden on our tenants," says Maslan.
The Egleston Crossing Groundbreaking Ceremony, with featuring
Mayor Thomas M. Menino, is scheduled for June 28, 2003 at 11 a.m.
in Egleston Square.
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