In February 2019, the UMass Board of Trustees unanimously approved a 99-year final
lease agreement for the Bayside Expo Center with Accordia Partners for approximately $192 million to $235 million. In June 2019, Accordia Partners acquired five buildings at 2
Morrissey Boulevard across the street from the Bayside property, and at a Columbia-Savin Hill Civic Association meeting in September 2019 with
Boston City Councilor
Frank Baker in attendance, announced a series of public meetings to formulate a proposal to redevelop the Bayside property beginning the following month. In June 2020, the BPDA announced that it was seeking nominations for a community advisory committee to jointly review the Accordia Partners Bayside proposal and the Center Court Partners revised redevelopment proposal filed with the BPDA the previous January for the former
WLVI television station at 75 Morrissey. In September 2020, Accordia Partners filed a 187-page project notification form with the BPDA for a mixed-use development titled "
Dorchester Bay City" on 34 acres of land that will total 5.9 million square feet of
gross floor area laid out over 17
city blocks, and will feature commercial and public space as well as 1,740 residential housing units. In October 2020, a 25-person community advisory committee held the first of six meetings scheduled through the following December to review the Bay City development proposal, and in the same month, the Walsh administration released a 174-page climate change adaptation report for the Boston Harbor coastline in Dorchester with a section on Columbia Point and Morrissey Boulevard. In November 2020, the BPDA hosted a pair of virtual public meetings to review the urban design elements, the transportation implications, and the infrastructure specifics of the Bay City development. In March 2021, the Baker and Walsh administrations announced a joint $1 million infrastructure study to improve the Morrissey Boulevard corridor and Kosciuszko Circle, as well as to identify improvements related to the Bay City development (which Accordia Partners has indicated that it plans to make a $26.7 million commitment to with $17.7 million reserved for constructing a new layout of Mount Vernon Street). In July 2021, Accordia Partners made a $10 million commitment in
matching funds to the Massachusetts Affordable Housing Alliance to assist nearby first-generation
homebuyers in making
down payments, while the Morrissey Boulevard-Kosciuszko Circle study received its funding from the
Massachusetts Department of Transportation and the BPDA. In December 2021, Accordia Partners filed a draft project impact report that included an agreement with the
Boston Teachers Union for 2 acres of land adjacent to the Bayside property where their current headquarters is located that will be included in the Bay City development. In February 2022, UMass Boston faculty members met with members of the Columbia-Savin Hill Civic Association at its monthly meeting to discuss mutual concerns about the Bay City development related to its potential traffic increase, its environmental impact, its planning process, and the amount of
affordable housing units in the development (despite the ratio of affordable housing units in the official proposal exceeding city government requirements), and mutually agreed to express their concerns explicitly to Boston Mayor
Michelle Wu and the Boston City Council. In the same month, the BPDA extended a
public comment window for the project for another month, Accordia Partners executives stated at a public meeting that the 36-acre development will be
LEED Gold, will include about 15 acres of
green space and
plazas with over 4,000 bicycle storage spaces (after stating at a public meeting the previous month that the development would only include 2,865 parking spaces of 3,600 allowed), On the 100-days mark of her tenure in office, Mayor Wu cited the Bay City development proposal as highlighting interconnectedness of concerns about climate change, housing affordability, and the design of public spaces. In March 2022, the
Dorchester Reporter published an
op-ed co-authored by former interim UMass Boston Chancellor
Katherine Newman in support of the Bay City development as an effort to increase
representation of racial minorities in the
Greater Boston biotechnology industry by creating a
science park in proximity to UMass Boston (a research university with a
majority-minority enrollment), noting that comparable development around the
Georgia Tech main campus in
Midtown Atlanta led to a $1 billion increase in sponsored research. According to the UMass Boston Office of Institutional Research, Assessment, and Planning, 69 percent of the 3,215 non-international students enrolled in the university's College of Science and Mathematics during the 2021–2022 academic year were nonwhite,
biology was the second most popular
undergraduate major at the university (after
business management) with 1,336 students, and of the non-international students enrolled in the university's undergraduate biology program (or of the 1,276 students of the 1,336 enrolled), 71 percent were nonwhite while 72 percent of all students in the program were
female. In April 2022, a UMass Boston faculty member, academic department coordinator, and graduate student co-wrote an op-ed proposing a 6-month extension to the BPDA's Article 80 review process and the creation of a
community benefits agreement for the Bay City development, reiterating previous concerns about the amount of affordable housing in the development, the development potentially increasing housing rents in Columbia Point, and furthering
gentrification in the neighborhood. In May 2022, a community group formed by resident activists delivered a petition with more than 700 signatures to Mayor Wu's office at
Boston City Hall supporting a 6-month extension to the BPDA review process while Accordia executives issued a press statement reiterating various community benefit commitments the company agreed to make during the public consultation process over the previous three years. In August 2022, Governor Baker signed into law an $11 billion transportation infrastructure bond bill that included $250,000 for improvements to the tide gates at Patten's Cove and that established a commission scheduled to assemble later in the same year and issue a report with findings and recommendations to improve the Morrissey Boulevard corridor and Kosciuszko Circle by June 1, 2023 (and that will include multiple state agency executives, the Mayor of Boston, state and local legislators, or their designees). , the report's release had been delayed until mid-2024. In December 2022, Accordia Partners filed a revised proposal with the BPDA that reduced the amount of floor space by 350,000 square feet, increased the amount of green and open space to 20 acres, and increased the ratio of affordable housing units to 20 percent, while on the same day the revised proposal was filed, Accordia executives met with the planning committee of the Columbia-Savin Hill Civic Association and stated in interviews with the
Dorchester Reporter that they hoped to receive BPDA approval for the project by the following summer. In January 2023, Accordia executives met with the Morrissey community advisory committee to discuss the revised proposal (ahead of public meetings hosted by the BPDA to discuss the revisions) where the committee members praised the modifications, while Accordia executives proposed replacing the Kosciusko Circle
rotary with a four-way
interchange at one of the public meetings hosted by the BPDA the next month. Ahead of a public meeting for the Bay City proposal in April 2023, U.S. Representative
Stephen F. Lynch from
Massachusetts's 8th congressional district,
Massachusetts State Representatives Daniel J. Hunt and
David Biele, the Black Economic Council of Massachusetts, and
Boston College High School President Grace Cotter Regan wrote letters to the BPDA in support of the proposal. In July 2023, the proposal received the approval of the Boston Civic Design Commission, while the BPDA hosted a virtual meeting for the proposal where the BPDA announced that it would
table consideration of the proposal until a BPDA board meeting the following September. In August 2023, the
Dorchester Reporter published an op-ed by co-written by
Martin Richard Foundation founder Bill Richard and
Boys & Girls Clubs of Dorchester President and CEO Bob Scannell in support of the proposal which stated that it was aligned with the aims of the joint project between their organizations to construct a
field house on Mount Vernon Street. In September 2023, the BPDA board approved Accordia's final master plan for the Bay City proposal. ==References==