[MassHistPres] seasonal visibility in local historic districts

Betty Slade dcolebslade at aol.com
Thu Dec 17 11:23:29 EST 2020


Plantings are not considered to block visibility from a public way in the Westport Historic District. Betty SladeWestport, chair, CPC In a message dated 12/17/2020 11:18:00 AM Eastern Standard Time, abtdewitt at rcn.com writes: 
Brookline's voted Guidelines, which are part of its rules & regs, specifically state that plant material, as well as  wood fences, which are presumed to be impermanent, are not deemed to block visibility from a public way. In your case, it would seems unreasonable that the commission’s determination, if acted upon in good faith, could be retracted retroactively. Dennis De Witt


On Dec 16, 2020, at 1:32 PM, Patricia Kelleher <pkelleher at Salem.com> wrote:
Hello, I have a local historic district question - Has anyone experienced a situation where a Commission found a proposed project to be not visible when an application was submitted only to discover several months later that the proposed work area is highly visible after surrounding trees have lost their leaves? If so, did the Commission have any recourse?   Thank you, Patti ----------------------------- Patti Kelleher Preservation Planner, City of Salem Department of Planning & Community Development 98 Washington Street, 2nd Floor Salem, MA 01970 Phone: 978-619-5685www.salem.comwww.preservingsalem.compkelleher at salem.com _______________________________________________
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