Girdosky v. Board of Zoning Appeal

11 Mass. L. Rptr. 516
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedDecember 28, 1999
DocketNo. 994478
StatusPublished

This text of 11 Mass. L. Rptr. 516 (Girdosky v. Board of Zoning Appeal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Girdosky v. Board of Zoning Appeal, 11 Mass. L. Rptr. 516 (Mass. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

Botsford, J.

The plaintiffs, five residents of the City of Cambridge, bring this action under G.L.c. 40A, §17, to challenge the granting of a special permit by the Board of Zoning Appeal of the City of Cambridge (board). The matter was tried before me without a jury on November 17, 1999. Set forth below are my findings of fact and a discussion of the legal issues raised. For the reasons summarized there, I conclude that the plaintiffs’ challenge fails, and accordingly, that judgment in this case should enter affirming the board’s decision.

[517]*517 Findings of Fact

The property in question is located at 420 Broadway in Cambridge (the locus). The locus consists of a 5000 square foot lot on the corner of Broadway and Ellery Street and has on it a single story commercial building which occupies approximately 3,400 square feet. It is located in a Residence C-l District as defined by the Cambridge Zoning Ordinance (the Ordinance). For more than forty years, the locus has been operated for the retail sale of merchandise, which is not a permitted use as of right in a Residence C-l District. Most recently, from 1978 until approximately June 1, 1999, a retail grocery store known as Sage’s Market has occupied most of the building on the locus, with a self-service laundromat operating in the remaining portion. Sage’s Market has operated pursuant to a variance for use and parking granted by the board in May 1978.

The locus is outside of an Institutional Overlay District, as defined in Section 4.54 of the Ordinance. It has an existing lot status of (2), that is, “[a] lot which contains any use other than those residential and institutional uses listed in Subsection 4.31 or 4.33 [of the Ordinance] ...”

Sage’s Market closed its doors on or about June 1, 1999. The government of Switzerland (Swiss government) has contracted to purchase the locus from its present owner, Charles E. Sage, trustee of the S&M Realty Trust. The Swiss government intends to establish on the locus a consular office and program that would be known as the Swiss House for Advanced Research and Education (SHARE or Swiss House). SHARE is a new program designed to increase cooperation and networking between and among Swiss scientists,3 Swiss business people and American scientists in the Boston area on scientific and technological projects and issues. Swiss House, the name to be given to the SHARE facility, would provide a meeting place, study and non-experimental research center for scientists and academics. It would also provide extensive computer capability, have a capacity for teleconferencing, and would contain a library with special books about Switzerland and science in Switzerland. However, Swiss House would not offer regular consular services such as passports and visas or be open to the general public for any regular purpose. The Swiss government proposes to open the facility two times a year for community use, either as meeting space or as an arts exhibition space. Some discussions have also taken place with the principal of Rindge and Latin school concerning the possibility of joint activities involving Swiss House and the students.

The SHARE program would have a staff of three, one full-time director and two others working on a half-time basis as support staff. While scientists and academics would use the facility, it is not expected that the numbers of persons at any one time would be very great. Meetings of four to ten individuals might occur two or three times a week, but there is no plan to use the facility for large conferences or lectures. Moreover, it is contemplated that the staff as well as those meeting at or otherwise using the SHARE facility would generally use public transportation, taxis or walk,4 so that the amount of vehicular traffic and need for parking spaces would be relatively small.5

Under Article 4.56 of the Ordinance, entitled “Table of Institutional Use Regulations,” the proposed use of the locus by the Swiss government fits within Section 4.56(d)(2), “(p)rivate library, study center or other research facility.”

The building currently on the locus is a one story, rectangular structure with a flat roof, consisting of two stores with glass store fronts. The Swiss government intends to return the building to its original brick facade, to replace the store fronts with windows and add windows on the sides and rear of the building, and to increase the external lighting, but no additional construction is contemplated such as, e.g., the addition of one or more stories or enlargement of the building footprint. The interior of the building would be completely renovated and ultimately Swiss House would consist of a ground floor of 3200 square feet with a central open meeting area, a cafe and kitchenette, and a media room. There would be 800 square feet of office space at a gallery level above the ground floor.

Sage’s Market, the convenience store operating at the locus through May of 1999, was open seven days per week, apparently from 7:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Quite a significant amount of trash and litter collected around the building, although not necessarily attributable in whole or significant part to the store. On the flat roof of the building there were large heating and air conditioning units that were noisy. It is contemplated that the Swiss House would be open on weekdays during regular business hours, approximately 8:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m., and closed on weekends. The building might be open for evening activities once or twice a week. Swiss House will use heat and air conditioning, but it does not appear from diagrams that Swiss House will retain the large units on the roof of the building.

The locus is between Harvard Square and Central Square, about a ten-minute walk from Harvard Square and its subway stop, and approximately the same distance from Central Square and the subway stop there. Diagonally across the street from the locus is a park that is devoted to passive recreation. On the other side of that park is the Cambridge Rindge and Latin School and the Cambridge Public Library. This area is generally residential in character.

Broadway Market, described by all witnesses as an upscale but very good food market, is located approximately two and one-half blocks down Broadway from the locus, in the direction of Harvard Square.

[518]*518The plaintiffs live in fairly close proximity to the locus, but most are not abutters. The plaintiff Stavos Mackrakis lives at 61 Ellery Street, in a house on the other side of Ellery Street from the locus and two or three buildings down towards Harvard Square. Mackrakis can see the side, rear and roof of the building on the locus from his house. When Sage’s Market was open, Mackrakis bought food items there approximately two times per week. Broadway Market is within several hundred yards of his house. Mackrakis has off-street parking for himself and his family, but he has no off-street parking available for his tenants. His current tenants do not have any cars.

The plaintiff William Schreiber lives at 8 Ellery Square in a town house that is part of a condominium development. The common courtyard of the Ellery Square development extends to the locus, so that Schreiber effectively abuts the locus. He can see the locus from his house. Schreiber bought food at Sage’s about two times per week, but has also used the Broadway Market.

The plaintiff Joan Pickett Uves in a two family house to the rear of Mackrakis’ house on Ellery Street.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 Mass. L. Rptr. 516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/girdosky-v-board-of-zoning-appeal-masssuperct-1999.