You can read about the alternative designs and watch the discussion here:
https://www.reddit.com/r/Somerville/comments/1qvje8t/13story_and_other_alternatives_for_copper_mill/
And of course feel free to participate! I posted on Reddit as an outreach experiment to hear new voices and maybe spare us some emails. This is not meant to replace DSNC's internal in-person and online discussions, nor direct feedback from you to Copper Mill and the government.
Thanks to the folks who participated in the Elmway discussion that surfaced a strong desire to explore alternative shapes, and to John Bonham-Carter and David Booth and Roger Levy, whose brains have stormed some specific tweaks for us to consider.
-B.
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On Feb 4, 2026, at 14:42, 'Carol' via Davis Square Neighborhood Council <daviss...@googlegroups.com> wrote:
As you all know, I am not in favor of a building that is so out of character for the neighborhood. I consider 26 stories as excessive.
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On Wed, 2026-02-04 at 19:42 +0000, Carol wrote:
As you all know, I am not in favor of a building that is so out of character for the neighborhood. I consider 26 stories as excessive.
How do you feel about the proposed alternative of 500 units in 13 stories?
-B.
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My main concern continues to be the interruption of the Burren’s business, and the potential risk of it not surviving to reopen two or more years later. I support a scaled-down proposal that would leave the Burren intact, if possible.
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On Wed, 2026-02-04 at 14:24 +0000, Elizabeth Merrick wrote:
I applaud the innovative thinking about alternative designs. Thank you for sharing this. But IMHO we should not be wedded to the developer's goal of 500 units and how best to cram that all into this one space in Davis Sq. That would free up even more options for more acceptable design that would "enhance" not "transform" this neighborhood square.
Where do you see the right balance between housing density and height? Six stories of the U-shaped design would give 232 units. Is that enough, or would you prefer closer to 450? Somewhere between 500 and 250 is a donut hole of not-feasible surrounded by a fuzzy layer of low profitability and high financial risk. This is due to the costs of steel construction (6 stories could be mostly wood). We could try to push Copper Mill toward that donut hole, but if people actually prefer 6 stories, it would be easier to just skip right over it.
Factor into that preference that cutting the residential capacity of the core in half means that twice as much land is needed to house the same number of people. Holding constant the amount of housing shortage mitigation, that would mean more displacement of existing buildings, whether along the main commercial streets or inner residential blocks (such as the Jay-Howard-Thorndike-Holland block I live on).
-B.
On Wed, 2026-02-04 at 21:21 +0000, Carol wrote:
Even worse as it only attacks singles or students.
(I assume that's supposed to be "attracts".)
So the 13-story U-shaped building actually has the same apartment size mix as the 3-story pedestal + 26-story tower design that Copper Mill is proposing. That is (by unit count, not square footage):
Aggressively forcing 50% of the U-shaped building units to be 2BR or 3BR and converting studios to 1BR where possible would push the building from 13 stories to 20 stories (keeping the same number of units to maintain financial feasibility). Would that 20-story building be preferable to the 13-story one, or would it be better to aim for somewhere in between those heights by having an intermediate % of 2BR and 3BR?
Some relevant stats: Recently constructed buildings of this size in our city have a 3BR ratio of 2%, because 3BRs take up a lot of space and fit better on corners. Smaller buildings have had 12.5% (48 units) or even 100% (3 units). So another way you could choose to make room for families is to attract students and single people into big buildings like Copper Mill's. When some of these people move out of 2BR and 3+BR apartments and get rid of housemates they don't want, they open those apartments in smaller buildings (usually on a residential street with a yard and maybe a driveway) for families with children.
-B.
On Wed, 2026-02-04 at 14:48 -0500, Janet Wood-Spagnoli wrote:
I am not in favor of a 25 story building. I consider it to be a blight on this very small square. Shorter is better. I would like construction across the square to be considered more holistically to the betterment of housing needs.
Can you quantify that? By "shorter is better", do you mean the 13-story U-shaped building is OK and better than the 3/26-story, or do you also mean 6-story is better than 13 and 1-story is better than 6?
Put another way: After performing the holistic consideration you propose, given the number of stories and number of housing units you want on this site, what is the optimum number of stories you want to see for this building? (I'm happy to estimate the height of more design variations if you need more data to decide.)
-B.
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My main concern continues to be the interruption of the Burren’s business, and the potential risk of it not surviving to reopen two or more years later. I support a scaled-down proposal that would leave the Burren intact, if possible.
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Thanks for expanding the conversation to Reddit, that was a great idea.
My two cents on the building height issue: as a pedestrian walking around the city, the part of a building that has the biggest impact on me is the portion that directly abuts the sidewalk. One of the things I like about the current plan for the tower is that it has a lower 3 story height immediately abutting the sidewalk. This is the part of the building that I think I experience most directly. Then the tower is set back, in a way that I don’t think would impact me as much as I go about my business in the square.
I know folks seem to be more in favor of a shorter building, 8-15 stories depending on who you talk to. But my assumption is that a shorter building will bring the full height of a new (shorter) building right up to the sidewalk. I’d rather have a 3-story height along the sidewalk than a 8-15 story height (depending on how it goes). I’m reminded of the seaport, where the height of the neighborhood was restricted so all of the buildings go right up to the sidewalk to maximize the available building space. Walking along a solid curtain of a 13-story wall going straight up is less appealing to me.
Anyway, this is a long way of saying, I’m ok with a tower because I think it’s an ok trade-off for lower height along Elm St. But I’m hearing that the height of the highest part of the building seems to be just as important or more to many others. If folks prefer a different shape I can live with that.
My real hope is that we’ll be able to negotiate some valuable benefits for city residents. For example, I dream of living in a city with a nice big community space that residents can book for meetings of all sizes (like the DSNC!).
--Rebecca
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On Thu, 2026-02-05 at 11:34 -0500, Elizabeth Merrick wrote:
I'm sure we could put in very substantial new housing that would yield a lot of affordable units, without sacrificing so much of our neighborhood square.
I'm trying not to pester everyone, but the first question Copper Mill would have if we asked for "not a tower but substantial new housing" is what we mean by "substantial". In other words: what height and width are you willing to say "yes" to, assuming it came with a robust package of your favorite community benefits?
-B.
On Thu, 2026-02-05 at 11:34 -0500, Elizabeth Merrick wrote:
Thank you Elizabeth!
If we get the Davis Square Area Plan that the new mayor and City Planning promised during the election campaign this is exactly where the dialogue should and can take place. As a community we can establish agreed upon envelope and zoning criteria that will bring clarity and clear criteria that developers and parcel owners can then work towards “as of right”.
Remember that the City owns four empty (parking) parcels around the square that can and should be sold for development that will also help the housing fabric around the square. Something we should be requiring in a comprehensive plan.
The affordability crises, it’s not a housing crisis, as there are a multitude of issues driving this in the Greater Boston region and its certainly not just Somerville’s problem. Singular, high end development projects like this end up being detrimental to our local affordability. Somerville has and will continue to add more than our share of housing – but let’s do it on our terms – see Somervision.
For all the discussion regarding affordability in this chat no one seems to be zeroing in on the Trust’s obscene land valuation of $42m. Once an area plan is established, land owners and developers will work towards appropriate cost parameters.
Alex
From: 'ebm...@comcast.net' via Davis Square Neighborhood Council <daviss...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Friday, February 6, 2026 9:32 AM
To: Christopher Beland <bel...@alum.mit.edu>
Cc: Davis Square Neighborhood Council <daviss...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: [DSNC] 13-story and other alternatives for Copper Mill project
I don't know that voicing every person's individual preference on specific height on this email list will be useful at all...it could just spark unproductive arguments and lectures... but thank you for asking! I appreciate your constructive tone and approach.
Just speaking for myself, I'd like to see maximum height of 6 stories in the middle of Davis. Elm Street is a relatively narrow street (not a Mass Ave for example) and I'd like to see the square overall retain local neighborhood center appearance with 4, 5 and 6 stories max. Not sure about the width part. As far as design, again just personally, I'd like to see a building design that is not monolithic in appearance - maybe some variation, demarcation, detail would accomplish that.
Elizabeth
From: Christopher Beland <bel...@alum.mit.edu>
Sent: Friday, February 6, 2026 5:06 AM
To: Elizabeth Merrick <ebm...@comcast.net>
Cc: Davis Square Neighborhood Council <daviss...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: [DSNC] 13-story and other alternatives for Copper Mill project
On Thu, 2026-02-05 at 11:34 -0500, Elizabeth Merrick wrote:
I'm sure we could put in very substantial new housing that would yield a lot of affordable units, without sacrificing so much of our neighborhood square.
I'm trying not to pester everyone, but the first question Copper Mill would have if we asked for "not a tower but substantial new housing" is what we mean by "substantial". In other words: what height and width are you willing to say "yes" to, assuming it came with a robust package of your favorite community benefits?
-B.
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THE DSNC HAS VOTED TO REQUEST THAT THE CITY EXERCISE ITS 'SAFE HARBOR' POWER TO DELAY 40B, SO THAT IT CAN COMPLETE A DAVIS SQUARE PLAN BEFORE LOCKING ITSELF INTO THE RIGID 40B TIMETABLE.
We never voted to ask the city to assert Safe Harbor. We voted to ask the city to ask Copper Mill to withdraw their application completely until after the Davis Square Neighborhood Plan is complete. The formal letter implementing that vote is nearly ready to send.
-B.
On Fri, 2026-02-06 at 20:39 +0000, Josiah Lee Auspitz wrote:
FOOTNOTE: Do I remember correctly that there is a zoning provision that a property like Asana's bordering on a specified stretch of civic space (100 feet?) qualifies by right to add a tower to the existing four-story base? I put this question to Dan Bartman a few weeks ago. I'll report his response when it comes.
In the interest of quickly getting to the bottom of the rumors about Asana being able to build a tower by right, I poked through the Somerville Zoning Atlas and ordinances.
What I found:
I assume the Commercial Block Building tower is the scenario you're thinking of? From what I can tell this block is not eligible for that building type.
The minimum lot size for a Commercial Block Building is 200 ft by 250 ft, and it must have streets on opposite sides or face "at least three thoroughfares or civic spaces". There are plenty of abutting streets and there's the new CIV space, but the CR4 areas don't look big enough to support a Commercial Block Building by right. The Chipotle-Oath frontage looks to be only about 100 ft, and the Elm Street Taproom-Starbucks frontage is about the same. If the CIV was still CR4, there would be about combined 250 ft, but the distance between Elm Street and Herbert Street property lines looks to be only 175 feet.
-B.
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PJ,I think that the entire point of the online discussion is determine what the community wants so that we don't have to accept what Copper Mill prefers. Ceding the decision to 'capitalism' seems like a false argument, especially for someone who is on the board of DSNC, who's explicit mission is to represent the interests of the community in discussion with developers.Agreed that there are many other buildings in Somerville that can meet the diverse needs of the community. However, 500 units in Davis Square will have a big impact on the community. Waving off a concern by saying that some other, unknown development in the future will address an expressed concern seems insincere.
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On Wed, 2026-02-04 at 11:41 -0500, Victoria Antonino wrote:
I’m terribly concerned with helping the people who live here to be able to stay here. Let’s get that inclusionary number to 40% and have that conversation.
Bumping the affordable housing from 25% to 40% would permanently cut $2 million per year from building rent, representing a 24% reduction in profit. I'm not sure how many people would keep doing the same job if their pay was cut by a quarter; that would be a huge ask.
-B.
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On Mon, 2026-02-09 at 12:12 -0500, Frank (fiddle...@gmail.com) wrote:
what fraction of the building will be fully accessible for people with disabilities?
The Copper Mill 40B application says that 5% of the building will be "Handicapped Accessible Units", 18 market-rate and 7 income-restricted.
This conforms to 521 CMR 9.4, which requires 5% of units meet the Group 2A accessibility standard (in all rental apartment buildings with 20 or more units). These are designed to be suitable without modification for a person using a wheelchair.
521 CMR 9.3 requires the remaining apartments on all floors (because this building has elevators) to meet the Group 1 accessibility standard, so that the apartment would be suitable for a person using a wheelchair after modification.
CMR is the Code of Massachusetts Regulations, which from what I gather is stricter than the federal minimums. From what I read, the federal law that applies to private apartment buildings is actually the Fair Housing Act as amended in 1988. The Americans with Disabilities Act came two years later and added requirements for hotels and commercial buildings, and there are other rules for federally owned or funded facilities.
If you are curious exactly what is required for Group 1 and Group 2A, you can find 521 CMR in its entirety here: https://www.mass.gov/lists/521-cmr-2006-edition
-B.
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I meant to add, the state Architectural Access Board can apparently require up to 10% of units be Group 2A, if there is a documented need for more than 5% in a certain part of the state. I don't know if they have ever done that or if they publish regulations like that in advance or if someone has to file a complaint and ask for that for a specific building. This is also something that the ZBA can ask for more of, but it would be helpful to know what the actual need is right now in Somerville.
-B.
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Jeff,Let's take you logic/anecdote a bit further:You say it is OK to accept that families need to move out of the city due to a job change. How about people who have a 2nd or 3rd kid; (or perhaps a single disabled kid) perhaps they don't get to live here either? Someone previously stated that anyone who needs a car for their job (house cleaner, plumber) won't be accomodated. Maybe also include the elderly since they can't ride their bike to an MD appt? Finally, and most importantly, any family who have kids that play hockey - way too much gear to put on a bike!I'm not that passionate about parking; I think that there are ways to address this that reasonable people can agree to. I also strongly support the idea of fewer cars and more bikes. However, I think this is an example of where an ideology runs into the reality of how people actually live their lives. If you believe Reddit, everyone in Somerville works in Kendall Square (but is also remote), bikes everywhere and goes to the Burren 3 times a week. If this were actually the case, we should build multiple towers exclusively with 1BR/studios and zero parking so long as we save our favorite bar. However this isn't what I see when I actually talk to my friends, neighbors and other parents with kids in school.The goal should be to provide/support housing that works for everyone, not just those that match our personal experience or preferences or stage in life. Whether 6 stories or 26 stores, I personally would like to see a plan that maintains Somerville's diverse demographics; I don't think that the current proposal does this - the zero parking is just one indicator of this.I know that the Copper Mill project won't address all our needs in a single development; regardless of the outcome of this proposal, I think that the more interesting and valuable effort will be on the updated Davis Square Area Plan. I think that there was general acceptance of the last version and likely some support for increased density. I'd really like to see how this project fits within the overall context of the square before we approve a big project that does not at all align with the current plan.MichaelMichael
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On Wed, 2026-02-11 at 11:43 -0500, JOSIAH AUSPITZ wrote:
In running real estate numbers, it is important to distinguish return on investment (ROI) from profit. A zero profit outcome can be quite acceptable, if the costs include retirement of loan principal and a generous management fee.
I'm not an accountant, so feel free to correct me or explain in more detail, but from what I can tell the financial projection in the 40B application assumes that Copper Mill will never retire the loan and will pay interest in perpetuity. That might not be what they actually plan to do if they are just making this pro forma to show the project is viable, but if they do pay down the loan they would need to temporarily give up some of the $8 million per year in cash the project would generate. A 25% slow-down in their ability to pay off their loan would also be a major hit, and create problems retrieving their equity later.
There is a one-time "Developer Fee" of $13 million listed under construction costs. (That's just under the cap of $13.275 million set by something referred to as the "DHCD Qualified Allocation Plan".) But obviously if the building can generate $8 million/year in revenue, most of the value the developer is looking for comes from that and not the one-time profit from the construction process (which is still nothing to sneeze at).
Burdening the building with lots of deed restrictions on the amount of rent that can be charged makes it more difficult to sell the building and retreive equity. In order to sell, it has to have enough positive cash flow to recoup the purchase price in a reasonable amount of time, cover any mortgage the buyer needs to take out, and provide a profit large enough compared to the risk and other potential investments to make the venture worthwhile.
-B.
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Parking:We know that, for weekend use, the demographic that can afford these units Will have cars. They can afford them. The data on comparables shows more than 1 car per unit.A 500-unit building will create a Market for 500 cars. This is met by any means available - increased cost to existing residents at garages, illegal use of vistor's passes, lobbying at town hall to relax restrictions, perhaps if we wait long enough some new parking lots (although 500 is a lot). The point is that it is Somerville residents not the developer who will pay these costs.This is what people are saying about scale. If you build at the scale of Kendall Square or Boston, you get Kendall Square or Boston. It is how we destroy the local color and character of our cities.My view is that Davis has real character that will make it a success in the long term - IF we do not destroy it.Best,DanOn Wed, Feb 4, 2026 at 7:25 PM Mieke Citroen <mie...@gmail.com> wrote:Here you are just hand waving wrong data. They are not allowed to get a Somerville parking permit. I sincerely doubt that there will be 500 cars looking for a parking space.--MiekeOn Wed, Feb 4, 2026, 16:06 Dan Ehrlich.dan <ehrli...@gmail.com> wrote:All hand-waving about mass transit aside, we already have pretty good data about the parking demands of a 500-unit building. Comparable condos selling in the price range we are discussing in the Davis Square region bring a little over one car per unit. This is just the fact. Can we imagine the stress on the square that would be put with 500 additional cars seeking overnight parking?This is a pretty good deal for the developer if they do not have to pay for the stress that would create. "Transform" seems to me to be the right word here.DanOn Wed, Feb 4, 2026 at 3:37 PM 'Christopher Beland' via Davis Square Neighborhood Council <daviss...@googlegroups.com> wrote:On Wed, 2026-02-04 at 19:42 +0000, Carol wrote:
As you all know, I am not in favor of a building that is so out of character for the neighborhood. I consider 26 stories as excessive.
How do you feel about the proposed alternative of 500 units in 13 stories?
-B.
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On Tue, 2026-02-17 at 08:47 -0500, Deborah Pacini wrote:
As a former resident of Union Square, who appreciated its funkiness (and relative affordability), I do not believe the new towers have improved the square, or the lived experience of its nearby residents. In fact, my former neighbors are not happy about the increased traffic, as well as the loss of ethnic and other small businesses.
I'm a bit surprised at the assertion that the towers haven't improved the square. The land they sit on was formerly a parking lot and a giant scrapyard and a what looked like a sad isolated house. It always seemed like a bit of a wasteland; having retail businesses and ample housing there seems like a massive improvement.
Are you claiming that the towers caused a loss of "ethnic" and small businesses? (I put "ethnic" in quotes, because everyone has an ethnicity.) I would find that odd, given that I've heard small businesses in Davis say adding a tower to Davis Square would give them more customers. It would be helpful to know what businesses you're talking about. From afar, it feels like small businesses in Union are doing great. I know two furniture stores that have closed, but they've regenerated into other businesses. There's been a healthy increase in small, funky retail businesses with the opening of Bow Market, and Union Square Donuts is becoming a regional export powerhouse.
As someone who goes to Union Square regularly specifically for imported Brazilian groceries, I find it odd to hear it criticized as a place bereft of "ethnic" or funky businesses. My husband and I have popped over to Union for Indian food at Masala, vegetarian at Saus several times, The Neighborhood for Portuguese and brunch that rivals Ball Square, and ran into drag bingo while getting Italian at Vera's. I hope to make it back and gradually eat our way through the Peruvian, Thai, Mexican, Korean, Japanese, German, and American offerings.
I'm unconvinced that "neighbors don't want to deal with more traffic" is a valid reason to not locate housing in any given place. This is true of neighbors everywhere, no matter the existing density. My mom feels like her suburban street is too crowded with cars because sometimes someone will actually park across the street from her driveway. Which I always laugh at because it's a rare day when someone is not parked across the street from our Somerville driveway. The best way to have fewer people driving (other than perhaps reducing the overall population) is to let them live somewhere they can access transit or bike infrastructure, and the Prospect and Copper Mill towers are perfectly situated for both. Forcing people to live in lower-density housing means transit is less feasible and cars travel longer distances through more traffic.
-B.
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