Among those discussed as possibilities were:
* Constructing a
* Building a deck at the property currently occupied by Cambridge Courts apartments (above) on West Main Street; and,
* Razing the four homes on Hamilton Street between the Bell Building and the amphitheater site for surface parking or a future parking facility.
Pelissier estimated the third option could provide 50 to 80 surface parking spaces and the agency also could pursue a future parking facility for the site. Construction of a parking deck is expensive (~$20,000/space) and buying the homes might be less expensive but just a matter of dealing with multiple property owners, he added.
One suggestion raised last week that was quickly shot down was pursuing a lease with St. Mark's Church across the street from the amphitheater site. Redevelopment Agency Commissioner Timothy Nash, who sits on the St. Mark's Church finance committee, told the agency in no uncertain terms that the church property on Hamilton Street is not for sale and will not be decided for at least 18 months. St. Mark's -- not the archdiocese -- owns the church property. (St. Mark's is slated to merge with St. Mary's Church on Central Avenue, as per directions from the Archdiocese of Newark.)

2 comments:
It'd be nice if they just incorporated parking into the area. I won't go downtown because they took all the parking away. I'm not walking from the arts center to the garage late at night, I could walk home if I want to walk that distance. My house is closer.
Why don't these builders THINK...
I rarely if ever park in a parking deck because the prices are an abomination..
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