Gallery

Publication Date: June 1988  The Church of the Presidents Quincy center at Christmas time Sept 1, 1992 Photo by Gary Higgins Downtown Quincy Days, a sidewalk sale has hancock st as a pedestrian mall. the cycling murrays provided some entertainment for those attending the event. 7/15/92 Photo by Gary Higgins Quincy The Bargain CEnter John Steckl photo  Dec 1986 The combination of Christmas decorations and auto headlights make for a beautiful time-lapsed arial shot over Quincy Center. Dec 24, 1996 Photo by Fred Field Greenleaf building in Quincy. 4/21/99 Photo by Fred Field photo-7.jpg Patrick Alessi, 15, Quincy walks on Hancock St minus a shirt due to record breaking temps.  3/31/98 Photo by: Gary Higgins photo-23.jpg
Subscribe

The Road Show

EdB Koch lb 102207We will be taking the vision and preliminary plans on the road with a series of about 20 public meetings over the next two months.  We will get the full schedule out to The Ledger as soon as all the details are finalized, but the first meeting will be held with the Merrymount Neighborhood Association at 7 p.m. next Wednesday (March 25) at the Merrymount School.

The Street-Works  and administration teams will be there to detail progress to date. More importantly, we will be there to listen to you, your concerns, your thoughts and to answer your questions.

As mentioned in my first post, this will be the most extensive public  process for any project in Quincy history, and it is exciting to be talking about something so positive considering these difficult times.

In addition to meetings with individual neighborhood groups, we will be co-sponsoring general meetings with City Councilors in all six wards throughout April in May.

Stay tuned for all the details.

2 comments to The Road Show

  • Mary O'Toole

    I find it interesting that certain (facts) being provided by StreetWorks LLC are not being verified even though they are being used as justification for their winning favor from our elected officials. Facts such as they control 70% of the effected property in the development area and that they have spent 15 million to date when all they show for that is 8 million on the purchase of one building. I would be interested to know if other property owners have been contacted and what the outcome of those discussions/negotiations has resulted in? Isn’t anyone interested to turn over a few rocks before we get behind this entity? If I am not mistaken, blind trust in large financial endeavors has not exactly resulted in positive outcomes lately!

  • Bill Felins

    There is no person on the city council or in the mayor’s office that is qualified to oversee a billion dollar project.

    Remember the shipyard?

Leave a Reply

 

 

 

You can use these HTML tags

<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>