Comment sought on Valley Community Development’s affordable home project in North Amherst

By SCOTT MERZBACH

Staff Writer

Published: 04-13-2023 11:48 AM

AMHERST — Before Valley Community Development moves forward with bringing 30 affordable homes to a North Amherst site, town officials are soliciting input from residents about the suitability of the site and the community need for such a project.

The comments, being solicited through noon on May 1, are required by MassHousing, the state’s quasi-public agency that provides funding for affordable housing projects. Those comments will also help Town Manager Paul Bockelman to submit a comment letter next month.

Valley CDC is looking to build 15 duplexes at 20-40 Ball Lane, an 8.3-acre site that once had a repair garage and trucking terminal. Valley CDC last August bought the property for $850,000 from the Matuszko family and has since removed the structures. Valley CDC’s goal with the project is reaching first-time homebuyers and then marketing the homes to underserved populations, including many who may be racial minorities.

Previously, the Community Economic Development Assistance Corp. announced its support for the project with an acquisition loan and predevelopment loan totaling $1.25 million.

Bockelman said Tuesday that those who comment are welcome to note the general developability of the site and potential impacts on neighborhoods and roads, and whether it is in keeping with the master plan’s aims of bringing more affordable housing. Bockelman said he sees the project as an important opportunity to diversify the town’s housing mix.

Valley CDC is at the project eligibility phase with the submittal of information to MassHousing for an evaluation of the site, the design concept, the financial feasibility of the proposal, and the appropriateness of the proposal as it relates to local housing needs and strategies.

Once this process is complete, with a project eligibility letter in hand, the nonprofit agency can seek a comprehensive permit through the state’s Chapter 40B law and the Zoning Board of Appeals will review the project.

“In addition to permitting, we continue to seek commitments from a variety of funding sources for the project development,” Jessica Allan, real estate project manager for Valley CDC, wrote in an email. “If we are successful, we hope to break ground in 2024, with a likely construction completion in 2026.”

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A current concept plan shows 15 buildings spread throughout the site, in two groupings, with common lawns and 60 parking spaces. The plan protects a meadow that buffers the site from Pulpit Hill Road to the north and Montague Road/Route 63 to the west.

The homes, a mixture of one-, 1.5- and two-story structures ranging from 960 to 1,310 square feet, will be passive solar. They will be designed as either two-bedroom or three-bedroom, with indoor and outdoor storage areas.

The design team includes Peter Flinker from Dodson & Flinker Associates, and Tom Chalmers from Austin Design Cooperative, Inc.

A site visit for the community, led by Valley CDC representatives, will take place on the site, rain or shine, April 26 at 5:30 p.m.

Comments can be submitted on the town’s website or by contacting Senior Planner Nathaniel Malloy at nmalloy@amherstma.gov or 413-259-3322.

Scott Merzbach can be reached at smerzbach@gazettenet.com.]]>