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Eastern Cambridge Coalition Supports 320 Charles St. Project to Benefit East End House
Category: News

Thursday, July 10, 2025

We write as a coalition of Eastern Cambridge residents and organizations who participated in a 14-member task force that engaged in a public, collaborative process with BioMed Realty over a 9+ month period to negotiate terms for their proposed rezoning and lab development at 320 Charles Street. The city’s practice and precedent under contract zoning is for a developer to work with the most impacted neighborhoods for mitigation negotiations, which is exactly what we did. What message would a last minute major change to the agreement send to community members and developers who negotiated in good faith?

While East End House is a member of our coalition, it neither led nor held a vote in the formal decision-making process. The agreement regarding the scale, and type of community benefits—including impact mitigation payments—was negotiated and endorsed by the full coalition after many public meetings. Our members also actively engaged with our fellow neighbors, including residents in Linden Park, and held several formal and informal conversations with them.  As a mitigation benefit, the coalition and our neighbors identified East End House as the operator of a badly needed new community social services and recreation center, which is the petition’s top funding priority.

We urge the Council and City Manager to uphold the terms of this hard-won agreement and reject efforts to reduce funding for the proposed East End House facility at the eleventh hour- particularly after two unanimous 9–0 Council votes in support of the project.

Here are the key elements that defined this multi-pronged, coalition led effort:

Inclusive and Transparent Process:

A 14-member coalition of East Cambridge stakeholders negotiated openly and in good faith with BioMed Realty for over 9 months. A representative from the Linden Park Neighborhood Association in the Wellington-Harrington Neighborhood, also participated as a nonvoting member of this coalition. The process involved dozens of public meetings open to all and known in the wider community through notices and media starting in October of 2024, and was guided by principles of transparency, equity, and accountability. The coalition members, in turn, also had several separate meetings and conversations with their neighbors to solicit feedback.

Neighborhood-Driven Priorities:

The community prioritized funding for a new East Cambridge-based social services and recreation center—run by East End House as the most meaningful mitigation for the local impacts of the proposed development. While East End House will operate the new center, it did not lead or control the negotiations. Decisions were made collectively by the coalition, representing the interests of the neighborhoods most impacted.

Direct Local Impact Justifies Local Benefits:

East Cambridge has absorbed millions of square feet of commercial development over 25+ years, along with its attendant negative impacts (noise, traffic, displacement, loss of open space, etc.), while the real estate tax benefits, including an estimated $3m+ in annual tax revenue and an almost $10 million contribution to the Affordable Housing Trust Fund from this project, are shared citywide. This rezoning provides an opportunity to reinvest directly in the most affected community by providing a purpose built facility that, in fact, will benefit ALL of Cambridge.

Precedent for Developer-Directed Benefits:

Other recent zoning agreements include BioMed’s recent building of a performance arts space with programming by Global Arts Live which cost tens of millions of dollars, and demonstrates that developer-directed community benefits negotiated with impacted neighborhoods are well-established. A similar public, transparent process led to that East Cambridge community space, and no one suggested that arts non-profits in other areas of the city should be funded instead.

$20M Is Essential to the Project’s Viability:

The EEH facility project depends on the full $20 million commitment to proceed. EEH will still need to raise an additional $10 million. In the spirit of compromise, $1.750 million of community benefits originally targeted for Eastern Cambridge causes, was re-directed to non-profits in other parts of the city by the Council before the up-zoning was moved out of Ordinance Committee by a 9-0 vote of the Council on May 20. Any further reduction in the funding threatens to derail the entire project, leaving a vital community service without a future home.

Conclusion

You heard from staff and community members about the critical role East End House already plays in our lives as a beloved multi-service center serving across generations. Any effort to alter or reduce the agreed-upon funding for East Cambridge’s highest-priority community benefit upends the result of a long, collaborative process conducted in good faith. This project represents a rare and powerful alignment between a private developer, community residents, and the City- delivering real benefits where the need and impact are greatest. As the Cambridge Day reported a Councilor’s remarks after the second Council 9-0 vote in favor of the project, “This is a good example of something other developers should look at. When you work well with the community and you compromise and you’re open and transparent and fair and deliver on your promises, as BioMed has always done, things go smoothly. Play games and goof around, it gets more complicated.”

Rather than unraveling this success, we encourage the City Council, City Manager, and non-profit sector to begin a broader, forward-looking conversation about meeting citywide nonprofit needs – without sacrificing community-led solutions already in motion.

Thank you for your consideration and continued commitment to community sensitive development.

Sincerely,

Robert Simha
Chair, 320 Charles Street Task Force & Vice President, ECPT

Matthew Connolly
President, Linden Park Neighborhood Association

Abigail Lewis-Bowen
Secretary, East Cambridge Open Space Trust

Susan Lapierre
Chair, East End House Board of Directors