
Berklee College of Music has acquired the contentious parcel at 2 Charlesgate West on the eastern end of the Fenway, the school’s president announced last week, citing a need for more space on campus.
The parcel was sold to local developer Samuels & Associates just two months ago at a foreclosure auction, after the British developer that was planning to transform it into a 28-story apartment complex filed for bankruptcy on the project.
Samuels bought the parcel at the foreclosure auction in October for $28.1 million and flipped it to Berklee last month.
A Samuels spokesperson confirmed that it had been an even transaction.
“As
a developer and place maker with more than 25 years redeveloping
underutilized sites across the city, the 2 Charlesgate parcel has long
been of interest to our team,” Samuels co-president Peter Sougarides
said in a statement.
“When
we took advantage of the unique opportunity to purchase this property
at auction, we were aware that Berklee, a tenant in one of our
buildings, might have interest in the space. Together, we determined
that the best option going forward was for Berklee to purchase the
property. We look forward to future collaboration with Berklee.”
According
to Berklee President Jim Lucchese’s announcement of the sale, Berklee
had in fact been trying to buy the property for 20 years because of its
“strategic value.”
“The need for more space here on the Boston campus was the most
commonly cited challenge facing Berklee,” Lucchese wrote in the
announcement to students. “Those conversations drove a sense of urgency
to secure additional space.”
The
property sits on Ipswich Street, adjacent to the Back Bay Fens and the
Muddy River and steps away from the Massachusetts Turnpike. It’s also
across a small back alley from Berklee’s Boston Conservatory. Currently,
the land is occupied by the vacant, eight-story, 56,000-square-foot
Trans National Group office building. It has been vacant since the Trans
National shut down its headquarters there in 2012.
British
developer Scape purchased the parcel for $39 million in 2019, with
plans to build a high-rise residential tower. That plan faced
significant community opposition from people who were worried how a
high-rise would affect the health of the Back Bay Fens due to excessive
shadows. But the development plan eventually was approved, and when
Samuels acquired the property earlier this fall, it also got the rights
to the plan.
Scape
also made a $300,000 community benefit commitment to Fenway Forward
(FF), a nonprofit affordable housing developer in the neighborhood.
Richard Giordano, the organization’s senior advisor for special
projects, wrote to a number of elected representatives last week that
“It looks like we have to worry about [that commitment],” and that FF
had planned meetings with both Samuels and Berklee to discuss it this
week. The results of those meetings have not been publicly announced.
It’s
unclear if Berklee wants to redevelop the property, potentially as
“future collaboration” with Samuels, or simply refurbish the existing
space. The college has yet to announce any formal plans for the space.
One person with knowledge of the matter said that Berklee leadership
wanted to inform students as soon as possible when the deal closed, as
more space had been a major point of discussion, but that it was still
working out the details of what to do with the purchase.