Yes, regarding the amendment passed on Nov 22, I also heard that a Community Center design would explore expanded use of spaces, as part of presenting a range of financial options. Not that there would be one big building option.
My understanding was that this survey was meant to elicit thoughts, opinions and preferences of residents. So it is disappointing to read that when when "residents expressed their continuing interest in locating the Center at Lincoln Station, or in the consideration of other locations around town,” the response is outrightly rejected/defended against. A process of solving a problem demands creativity, not reinforcing a foregone conclusion. Lincoln is a small town. We can have multi-generational experiences simply by shopping at Donelans! Seriously, focusing more on town/citizen needs (including fiscal constraints) than on designing a monolith is key to arriving at a solution! Kathy Madison > On May 3, 2023, at 11:36 PM, Sara Mattes <[email protected]> wrote: > > Sadly, the focus on a monolith is constraining creativity. > What if, rather than simply dismissing Linocln Station as the host for a > monolith, we looked for a smaller space for a long-term lease of a “drop in” > center- ca community space for folks to stop, sit, bring something to eat > form home, the Twisted Tree, Donelans, Country Pizza? > Have a Senior Work-Off individual be in place to maintain order. > People could drop in as they went to PO or wanted to have a central place to > meet friends and neighbors. > The campus is not central and does not lend itself to this form of > socializing. > A more modest vision about how to use Lincoln Station would bring more > traffic to our small commercial district and provide a central location for > community engagement. > This would not preclude expansion of housing in the area, only expand mixed > use. > > We need more collaboration and sharing of spaces across town, not less…more > on ideas for that at a later date. > > As to intergenerational activities, the programing and traffic considerations > preclude potential for this to be realized on the Hartwell Campus. > Adult activities end as youth programs begin. > Facilities will offer multi-generational , not inter-generational use. > > > And, finally, I respectfully disagree on the sense of the amendment passed at > Spc. Town Meeting. > My read was there was a clear desire for continued use and potential > expansion of use of alternative spaces for programming…an expanded use of > spaces off campus. > I am curious what others heard. > > Sara > > > ------ > Sara Mattes > > > > >> On May 3, 2023, at 9:37 PM, Krystal Wood >> <[email protected]> wrote: >> >> Survey Responses regarding the Community Center Location. >> >> While the motion approved at the November 2022 Special Town Meeting >> recognized that the Community Center would be located at the Hartwell >> Complex, in the recent CCBC survey responses and during the open microphone >> Community Center meeting on April 4, some residents expressed their >> continuing interest in locating the Center at Lincoln Station, or in the >> consideration of other locations around town. There are a number of issues >> that are worth more explanation. >> >> The Lincoln Station location: >> >> 1. The Parks and Recreation (PRD) programs are located at existing space >> at the Hartwell complex, and will continue to be located at Hartwell, so >> Lincoln children can easily walk to their after-school activities. >> 2. There is no viable site at Lincoln Station for a Council on Aging & >> Human Services (COA&HS) center. No private land owner has talked to the >> Town about siting a center on their property. The Town owns three >> properties: the DPW site, paved commuter parking lot and unpaved commuter >> parking lot. Consultants in a previous study estimated the cost for moving >> the DPW to the only viable site (Transfer Station) to be about $25 million. >> The unpaved commuter lot is too small. The paved commuter lot provides >> public parking for the commuter rail, and presents challenges complying with >> MBTA requirements for appropriate parking capacity at train stations. >> Limited parking correlates with reduced train service. The MBTA and its >> constituency can be expected to protest a reduction in public parking at any >> MBTA station. Building on the paved lot would also eliminate the possibility >> of using the lot for potential commercial activity or a potential housing >> development. (Additional housing is the top priority for the revitalization >> efforts.) >> 3. Any construction for a center at Lincoln Station will require public >> funding for site preparation, parking, and a building, in addition to public >> funding for solving PRD’s facility and office space needs in Hartwell >> Complex. >> 4. Locating the COA&HS center at Lincoln Station would require >> duplication of facilities with those used by PRD in the Hartwell Complex, >> adding significantly to the construction costs, and also the maintenance and >> management costs. >> 5. Trying to use other locations at Lincoln Station -- above the bank, >> above Donelan’s, other Rural Land Foundation property etc., if available, >> would also reduce the options for future housing. >> >> There are many important considerations for locating the Community Center at >> Hartwell: >> >> 1. The PRD and COA&HS can co-locate as they need similar types of >> facilities and, most importantly, can share the same spaces. Both provide >> fitness activities, but largely at different times of the day. PRD and >> COA&HS provide arts-and-craft activities that can again be located in the >> same space, at different days and times etc. Use of the same facilities >> will provide significant reduction in construction costs, and provide >> operational efficiency gains. >> 2. There are synergies between the School, PRD and COA&HS programs, and >> the Hartwell location that will provide readily accessible opportunities for >> intergenerational activities unhindered by distance and transportation >> logistics of separate locations. >> 3. The campus has been studied extensively to ensure that a community >> center could be located on Ballfield Road, and it was determined that with >> proper design, there is sufficient space for parking and circulation. >> 4. The campus location is aesthetically more pleasing than the commuter >> lot at Lincoln Station. >> >> PRD and COA&HS programming beyond the Hartwell Complex >> >> Currently, PRD and COA&HS programs occur at many locations around town, >> other than the Hartwell Complex and both organizations will continue to use >> these locations. For a full listing please see the Decentralized >> Programming Matrix on the CCBC web site. >> >> 1. Currently the PRD runs programs at the Lincoln School Reed and Smith >> gyms, the School Auditorium and Learning Commons, and at Bemis Hall, Pierce >> House, the Library, First Parish Church, and Codman Farm, amongst other >> locations; and at town athletic facilities including Codman Pool, the sport >> and tennis courts, playgrounds, athletic fields and parks. >> >> 2. The COA&HS has programs at the First Parish Church, at Lincoln Woods, >> Hartwell Complex, the Pierce House tent, The Commons In Lincoln, the Ryan >> Estates, Minuteman Technical High School, on Lincoln’s trail network. >> >> There is a recognized need to revitalize Lincoln Station, but at the 2022 >> November Special Town Meeting, the democratic process resulted in a clear >> consensus and support for the amended motion for developing options for >> design choices and budgets for the Community Center Building at the Hartwell >> Complex. >> >> Thank you for taking the time to read through these clarifications, and for >> engaging in the process to discern how we address Lincoln’s challenges >> together. >> >> -- >> The LincolnTalk mailing list. >> To post, send mail to [email protected]. >> Browse the archives at https://pairlist9.pair.net/mailman/private/lincoln/. >> Change your subscription settings at >> https://pairlist9.pair.net/mailman/listinfo/lincoln. >> > > -- > The LincolnTalk mailing list. > To post, send mail to [email protected]. > Browse the archives at https://pairlist9.pair.net/mailman/private/lincoln/. > Change your subscription settings at > https://pairlist9.pair.net/mailman/listinfo/lincoln. >
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