A sense of inevitability dominated the meeting convened last night in
Allston to discuss the pros and cons of a new proposal by Harvard to
swap a five-acre property in the Brighton Mills Shopping Center for the
land currently occupied by the Charlesview Apartments.
The low-income housing community is situated on a plot of
land at the heart of Harvard’s new Allston campus, a seven acre
triangle at the intersection of Western Ave. and North Harvard Street
that may become home to a new center for the arts.
“Now we’re not moving yet, it’s not a done deal. I told Kevin
[McClusky ’76, director of community relations], the residents need to
talk about it,” said Charlesview Residents’ Organization President
Debby Giovanditto.
But the subdued tone of last night’s meeting, at which senior
citizens filled out evaluations of the offered site in five different
languages, suggested otherwise.
In a deal announced publicly last week, Harvard offered
Charlesview a five acre plot of land—currently home to K-Mart at the
Harvard-owned Brighton Mills Shopping Center—and the funding to
construct new units there in exchange for their current property.
The site—the third offered by the University in the last year and a half—is close to amenities like public transportation.
“So far this is the best site we’ve seen,” said Elsa Rojas, who has lived in the apartments for 25 years.
“We don’t want to leave, but I don’t think we have too much choice,” she added.
Nor does the residents’ perception that their potential
neighbors object to the construction of 310 units of low-income housing
for the Charlesview residents make the move more palatable, Rojas said.
Rojas referred to a meeting last Thursday at which neighbors of the new
site sharply questioned Harvard officials about the ramifications of
the move.
And Giovanditto noted that Charlesview residents face the challenge of combatting stereotypes about low-income communities.
“Charlesview is known as a project and we’re not a project. We
don’t have those kind of problems,” Giovanditto said last night.
“A BETTER BUILDING”
The Charlesview Board approached the University three years
ago, seeking a way to improve conditions for tenants of the dilapidated
apartments. The Board rejected two previous Harvard offers, maintaining
that those sites lacked adequate access to amenities like public
transportation.
Constructed in 1971, the concrete block structure—distinctly
lacking a view of the river—contrasts sharply with the crisp brick and
white finish of Harvard Business School, located just next door.
“If it’s going to be a better building and I’m going to get a
washing machine, then I’m all for it,” resident Karen Coleman, who
spent four years on a waiting list before getting an apartment, said of
the move. “But I came from projects projects—now that I’m here, I don’t
want to leave.”
Lucia Velazquez, who has lived in the apartments since they
were established in 1971, said last night that the move will spell the
end of the Charlesview she is familiar with.
“It will never be Charlesview the way Charlesview is now.”
—Staff writer Natalie I. Sherman can be reached at nsherman@fas.harvard.edu.
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