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Old 06-27-2015, 06:05 PM
 
Location: Northeast states
14,055 posts, read 13,937,277 times
Reputation: 5198

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Another one New Haven rents are getting expensive

Welcome To Winchester Ave. $3K A Month, Please | New Haven Independent
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Old 06-28-2015, 06:52 PM
 
Location: AZ, CT no longer
696 posts, read 703,619 times
Reputation: 2092
Quote:
Originally Posted by BPt111 View Post
Another one New Haven rents are getting expensive

Welcome To Winchester Ave. $3K A Month, Please | New Haven Independent
I must say that it's exciting to see that the team's hard work in solving structural and environmental issues associated with factory buildings constructed in the 1800s and left to decay for decades has resulted in a beautiful complex that retains its historical significance while enhancing the neighborhood and adding economic value to the city.
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Old 07-15-2015, 03:50 PM
 
54 posts, read 80,414 times
Reputation: 62
City approves Yale dorm with two floors of retail in the Broadway district. It will be built over the parking lot next to Tyco.

Yale Will Build On Broadway | New Haven Independent
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Old 07-16-2015, 10:50 AM
 
167 posts, read 175,858 times
Reputation: 165
Quote:
Originally Posted by JGBigGreen View Post
I really like New Haven but simply don't understand the draw, for some people, of Wooster Square. I think the whole area- including the core- would be well served by a renovation/redevelopment.
I lived there two-plus years after college and then reached the same conclusion you did and moved over to East Rock. Made even less sense living in WS since I'm a Modern guy so I wasn't enjoying the convenience of Pepe's and Sally's.

The only folks I know who still live there are daily commuters on Metro North and walk to Union Station (still not THAT short of walk though).
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Old 08-02-2015, 07:58 PM
 
Location: Northeast states
14,055 posts, read 13,937,277 times
Reputation: 5198
Also, their plan represented New Haven’s current development vision, which emphasizes entrepreneurship and mixed-use neighborhoods geared to biking and walking, as opposed to suburban-style big retail.
City Economic Development Administrator Matthew Nemerson noted that in two weeks the long-closed State Street Bridge will open, linking the project to the new market-rate apartments under construction at the former Star Supply factory on the other side. He sees a hot new-economy, new urbanist district developing where people walk to tech jobs that wouldn’t fit with a suburban-style big-box store and garage.
He called the emerging district “our Brooklyn—I know I’m not supposed to say that ... our New Haven” technology and residential area.

The two development teams vied to buy and redevelop the 195,000-square-foot building (pictured) and surrounding 6.95-acre land at 470 James St., a former CT Transit facility, at the gateway of Fair Haven’s emerging Mill River industrial/commercial district.


both development teams promised to feature access to the Mill River through a kayak launch. Both also planned to tear down the maintenance shed on the western end of the property while keeping and renovating the main building.Besides that, the two proposals offered two different visions—a big-box supermarket versus a “cool space” incubation hub for “a new generation of makers—along with two kinds of developers.


Locals Picked To Build By The River | New Haven Independent
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Old 08-20-2015, 08:28 AM
 
Location: Northeast states
14,055 posts, read 13,937,277 times
Reputation: 5198
High rents in effect in New Haven


Developer Eyes Rebuilding 3 Blocks In The Hill | New Haven Independent
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Old 08-21-2015, 06:54 AM
 
Location: Northeast states
14,055 posts, read 13,937,277 times
Reputation: 5198
It look like New Haven is aiming for high end apartments and it is in first stages.
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Old 09-07-2015, 12:18 AM
 
Location: Coastal Connecticut
21,752 posts, read 28,086,032 times
Reputation: 6710
Building boom meeting demand for apartments in New Haven
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Old 09-07-2015, 08:24 AM
 
Location: Northeast states
14,055 posts, read 13,937,277 times
Reputation: 5198
sound like Stamford prices.
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Old 09-07-2015, 09:59 AM
 
Location: Northeast states
14,055 posts, read 13,937,277 times
Reputation: 5198
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (WTNH) — Some New Haven residents want to see the Hill neighborhood revitalized. Developers are in talks with the city to rejuvenate several areas in the Hill Medical District. The proposed plan includes housing and commercial development. “I think it is great,” said Carol Muzzey. “It would bring the city back to life and make a safe place for the students to go and to shop, and places to go out to dinner.”
Those who work in the growing medical district around Yale-New Haven Hospital say they have to take a bus or drive to get to a bite to eat.
“We actually have to go down towards the green if we want to go out to eat with my friends, so it would be nice if we could just go down the street and find something quick,” said Alessandra Dimauro.
The plan, expected to cost $100 million to $150 million, would revive the Hill to downtown and devastated areas of the Hill, including the abandoned Welch Annex School. There would be restaurants, apartments, offices, and storefronts.
“I think it’s a great idea; I think it would be really good for job creation. I think it would bring more young people than we already have, and I think it would also bring in families,” said Tehreem Babar.



New Haven developers hope to revitalize Hill to downtown area | WTNH Connecticut News
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