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Approval of Wickenden Street development prompts controversy

Residents consider character of neighborhood, demands of housing crisis in deliberations over 269 Wickenden project

In August, the Providence City Plan Commission the master plan of a five-story mixed-use building to be located at 269 Wickenden St., the first of a series of approvals needed prior to construction. But some residents of Fox Point have expressed concerns regarding the size and character of the development.

The project will merge two existing lots at the corner of Wickenden and Brook Streets and will include 62 residential units, three commercial spaces and internal parking according to the developer鈥檚 .

At the , the commission also allowed the development to be five stories tall instead of the four permitted by the neighborhood鈥檚 zoning.

In a June 2 posted to the Fox Point Neighborhood Association website, FPNA Vice President Daisy Schnepel said the proposal, which she described as 鈥渦nreasonable, incompatible development,鈥 鈥渃ould forever change the environment鈥 of Fox Point and Wickenden Street.

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Vin Scorziello, a member of the association鈥檚 board of directors, expressed his concern that this development would 鈥渟et a precedent鈥 for developers to construct larger buildings on Wickenden.

This, he worries, would jeopardize the 鈥渇unky feel鈥 that characterizes Wickenden now, particularly if smaller businesses get driven out by increasing prices.

鈥淧eople appreciate that Wickenden is unique,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t has a lot of quirky stores and characters on the street who own them. 鈥 Lots of the businesses just have their own kind of flavor.鈥 Scorziello emphasized that he was speaking for himself, not the association.聽

In a to the City Plan Commission, Ward 1 Councilman John Goncalves 鈥13 MA鈥15 expressed sentiments similar to those of Scorziello, stressing the importance of 鈥渕aintaining the vibrancy and historic fabric of鈥 the neighborhood.聽

Goncalves drew comparisons between Wickenden and Thayer Street, which has been in the past three decades. One of Goncalves鈥檚 chief concerns is 鈥渒eeping 鈥榃ickenden Wickenden,鈥欌 he wrote.

But other residents hope this development will help address the housing crisis in Providence.

At the , Wickenden Street resident Ian Saxine emphasized the importance of the 鈥渉uman character鈥 of the neighborhood, which he said has decreased as a result of gentrification.聽

鈥淐ities are not museums,鈥 he said at the meeting. 鈥淚f we are going to make room for young people to continue to 鈥 make a home in Rhode Island, we are going to have to build more housing.鈥

Robert Azar P鈥24, deputy director of planning at the commission, emphasized that producing more housing is important for moderating rents. 鈥淭he rents that are being charged are a function of supply and demand,鈥 he said in an interview with The Herald.

Azar also explained that the process for approval of new developments involves looking at consistency with zoning and the city鈥檚 , which speaks to the compatibility of a building within the neighborhood, he said. According to him, the commission looks at 鈥渃haracter鈥 as objectively as possible during the approval process.聽聽聽

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鈥淲hen people talk about the character of the neighborhood, that is a very subjective term,鈥 he added. 鈥淚 don't believe that you can simply say a project is in keeping with or not in keeping with the character of the neighborhood. You have to go much further than that.鈥

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