Category Archives: Downtown

Starbucks to Mobil site

The Downtown Study Committee last night met with developers who are seeking to put a Starbucks at the site of the Mobil Station next to the Town House.  They are still working through the details.  A copy of their proposed Starbucks plan is attached.

It was reported that the new Dunkin’ Donuts at the old Friendly’s site would not include a Baskin Robbins.

Park Street Books is looking at a new site in Medfield.

Look for more outdoor dining this summer.  Outdoor seating for Medfield food establishments is permitted, despite some establishments having been told otherwise in the past.  The ZBA and Board of Health both reported to Kristine Trierweiler that no such prohibition existed.

Two trees to be planted in front of Larkins, where one had to be cut due to lifting the sidewalk.

Future plans:

  • more tree planting in the downtown
  • making the park by Baker’s Pond more of a garden
  • examining having utilities wires placed underground in the downtown
  • signage along Main Street for the Park Street businesses
  • faster permitting for new businesses seeking to open

On being a selectman

Emails this weekend to figure out how to have people express support for Sen. Timilty’s budget amendments for the Medfield State Hospital clean up, and today emailed Senate President Murray myself.

Today I also dealt with a new member to the MSH study committee and reviewed emails about the ad hoc 4 town committee studying the Bay Colony Rail Trail.

I am continuing to ruminate about the town’s ability to impact the development of the downtown – I think we missed a major opportunity several years ago when we did not push to support the Montrose School site being developed with mixed use housing and retail uses.  It would have made the downtown slightly larger, which we do need, moved the center of the downtown off North Street, and would have provided housing without many school children.  Those proposals needed a zoning change to happen, and there was no support at the time for that by the administrators and/or at the Board of Selectmen.

At the moment there are several downtown sites that are empty, and the town needs to be as proactive as it can be to figure out how best to get those sites filled with optimal tenants.

  • The former Strata Bank spot remains empty
  • The Cushman House on North Street, owned by the Montrose School, is both empty and falling down
  • The former garage on Jane’s Avenue is empty
  • The Mobil Station site is in transition
  • The former Coldwell Banker office on Main Street is empty
  • We need to do something to make the Park Street retail area more visible to traffic on Main Street

Both our blessing and our problem result from the same fact, that none of these sites really lend themselves to occupancy by the chain stores or restaurants that seek a site with a building surrounded by a sea of asphalted parking lot.

The downtown study committee commissioned an initial study of the downtown, 5-10 years ago, that told us to focus on the block surrounded by Main Street, North Street, Frairy Street, and Upham Road, with the First Parish Meeting House and Bakers Pond as the center of our town, having all the retail establishments open onto the parking lot in the middle of the block.  That study also recommended a pocket park next to Zebra’s and a green path along Vine Brook.

At the time, we heard from Norwood’s planner about its strategy of providing more liquor licenses to lure more restaurants to their downtown, and the large grants they got to improve their street scape with street lights and façade upgrades.

We may not be in ultimate control what tenants what rent spaces, but we should actively work to see what we can do to improve the downtown.  Perhaps we can still parlay that initial $30,000 study into the larger grant monies that we thought would be available at that time after we had the first study in our hands.

Dunkin’ Donuts into the Friendly’s site

I am told that the new tenant of the Friendly’s site, the local Dunkin’ Donuts franchisee owner, and the landlord of the site appeared before the Town of Medfield’s Historic District Commission last night with their architectural consultant, David Sharff, about the new Dunkin’ Donuts facility planned to move into the old Friendly’s site.
After our Board of Selectmen meeting last night, when I went to the town accountant’s office to sign the warrants (the selectmen must sign off approving all town checks each week), I bumped into Medfield Press editor Brett Rhyne on the first floor, who told me that at the just concluded Historic District Commission hearing that the Dunkin’ Donuts representative had appeared with plans showing the building somewhat remodeled, but mainly kept the same.  The color elevations he had received and showed to me, seemed to keep the same basic structure, just spiffed up the facade. 
  • The front plate glass windows were replaced with small pane windows. 
  • Dunkin’ Donuts said it will keep the walk up window.
  • Perhaps a new cupola.
 Brett Rhnye told me that Dunkin’ Donuts owns Baskin Robbins, so perhaps a Baskin Robbins well be part of the mix.

Montrose School’s Cushman House

At the request of the Historic Commission, I am trying to facilitate a meeting for the Historic Commission with the Montrose School at a Selectmen meeting about the Cushman House.  The Historic Commission is concerned about the dilapidated condition of that North Street building – former site of Edouard Sandoz’ bike shop.

On being a selectman

Exchanged emails today with the chair of the Dover Board of Selectmen and the chair of the Medfield Rail Trail Study Committee regarding a suggested meeting with the Norfolk Hunt Club.

Discussed with Jim James of Park Street Books his need for new space for his operation, and several possible alternatives.

Reported back to a resident on information gathered in response to a complaint.

Dale Street School tour

Ann and I took an hour and a half tour  of the Dale Street School with Bob Maguire and Tim Bonfatti this morning to see the issues that need attention first hand.  Excellent bones to the building, but serious problems with the mechanical systems and space needs for the ancillary programs that we are required to run.  The town is fortunate to have in the two individuals with the interest and expertise to undertake the needed conversation with the state and the town about what is needed and how we can best make it happen.

My favorite piece of information was that the heat is controlled by the head custodian just knowing by experience when to physically turn the boilers on and off – i.e.  there is no automatic control of the temperature via thermostats, as we are used to elsewhere.

Ultimately the Dale Street School will be one part of what is being conceived of as a Town of Medfield municipal campus along Dale Street that will also address the public safety and Medfield Park & Recreation Commission needs.  The Building Committee is meeting next at 7PM on 1/5/12 to proceed with the master plan for that campus idea.

In reviewing the 40 odd pages of materials Bob Maguire prepared about the Dale Street School for the state’s School Building Assistance people, I learned that the school’s address is actually 45 Adams Street, so shouldn’t we call it the Adams Street School?

“First Thursdays have started!”

The Library reports “First Thursdays of the month are a time to come downtown and check out the Zullo Gallery, restaurants and the library for events and activities. The Library is open until 10 so you can see the Zullo gallery artworks and get half off any fines you may have. Come on down!”

Friendly’s closing – a sadness and an opportunity for the town

I was really, really saddened when I learned from Patch this morning that Friendly’s may no longer exist in Medfield.  I had read about the impending bankruptcy, but had assumed that it would be a Chap. 11 filing with ongoing operation.

Friendly’s has been a big part of the fabric of the downtown ever since we came to Medfield in 1989, and we have been regular patrons.  It was an especially good place to go with kids.  Kristen and I just got ice cream there last Saturday after her soccer game.  When I coached soccer, it was a perfect place to take the team, as part of team building efforts, and affordable when the girls all got the $1.00 kids’ cones – not so much the day they all got and I learned about the Friend-z.

The landlord of the Friendly’s site had previously talked with the town about not renewing Friendly’s lease and getting a bank to locate at that site.  While a bank at that spot might work for the bank and the landlord, I do not see the town well served by another bank replacing such a heavily used restaurant.  I feel Medfield would be better served to have a business that interests a high volume of the Medfield public, such as a Lord’s, a Wills, a Park Street Books, a Go Fresh, a Zebra’s, a Basil’s or a Noon Hill Grill.  I would expect that such a prominent site would attract a lot of fast food establishments, but to my mind such a chain restaurant is of much less interest.

I feel that the downtown could use more retail space.  Eddie El Khoury told me that he looked for years for a suitable location for his Go Fresh restaurant.  A high percentage of the available retail spaces in the downtown are occupied by competing pizza shops, convenience stores, banks, and realtors, many of which are not of much interest to most residents, unless it is our pizza shop or bank.

The town already missed a major opportunity to dramatically remake its downtown when the  land was for sale where the Montrose School is now located.  There were many major developers interested in creating expensive mixed use developments there, which would have been a combination of retail on the first floors and residences above.  The town government at that time made the decision that it did not want to support the idea of the zoning change that was needed to allow such developments (the land is zoned for business and industrial use), so we got a school instead which needed no town permission.  The seller, Julias Tofias, was told by the town at the time to market the property to the businesses for which it was zoned, which businesses just did not want to locate in Medfield,  and so instead we got a tax exempt school and lost $150,000 in existing property taxes (but which property taxes would have been many times as much if the new mixed use developments had been built).  Note that there were no business or industrial users interested in the property, but many requests from developers for the mixed uses that were heavy on housing.  Such mixed use developments would have added to the critical mass of both retail space and housing to the downtown, making the downtown more vital and interesting.  The housing was condos in multistory buildings, and as such, not likely to attract families with children, so such a mixed use probably would have generated lots of positive tax revenue for the town over any municipal costs.  There is no question but that Montrose is a lovely addition to the downtown, but the alternatives were way more interesting to this writer.

The town should do what it can to effect getting the best possible use at the Friendly’s site, if Friendly’s is truly history.  The town should do what it can to positively impact the use of each parcel of land in the downtown, as the success of the merchants in the downtown may well depend upon the sum of those individual small actions taken by the town.  The town will need both vision and active planning to make such a process a success.

CVS Expanding

CVS has filed plans with the Conservation Commission to expand at its current location.  CVS will take over the whole building, including the part now occupied by the D’Angelo sandwich shop, and it will have a drive through pharmacy at the rear.