Below is my article that appeared in the Lincoln Squirrel today.

Lynne Smith
5 Tabor Hill Road
Lincoln, MA 01773
cell:  781-258-1175
[email protected]


My Turn: Site plan shows the downside of a consolidated community center
May 25, 2023 

By Lynne Smith

 <https://lincolnsquirrel.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/myturn-sm-feb2021.jpg>
Before the May 23 Community Center Building Committee forum, I walked with 
several others around the campus to understand what the new site plans would 
mean for the existing property. It was a beautiful time of day with sunlight 
slanting through the gorgeous old trees that encircled the tiny old pods. Lush 
grass and kids’ trails through the woods from Lincoln Road made me yearn to be 
a child in Lincoln.

Proposed parking spaces, wetland conservation restrictions, and limited 
buildable land are squeezing the site plans for a community center building on 
the Hartwell campus. The large parking areas proposed for each of the five 
alternatives presented dwarf the renovated and new buildings in the schemes 
shown by Ned Collier of ICON Architecture, who described the five site plans 
that will be posted soon on the CCBC website 
<http://lincolncommunitycenter.com/>.

Collier described in detail the need for setbacks from the underground river 
that must be crossed to enter the campus. Conservation restrictions would 
require tearing up the existing parking lot and adding a swale to protect the 
river. Parking spaces would then be farther from the main road with a two-way 
entry to the campus instead of the one-way entry and one-way exit, which are 
now in place.

Each of the five schemes includes a new two-story building replacing pod A and 
different levels of renovation for LEAP and the pod B buildings. The schemes 
also show the green space, needed as playgrounds and fields for children in the 
LEAP program. In all the plans, a new parking lot dominates and doubles the 
existing 50 spaces.

Consolidating two populations in one community center is driving the CCBC 
effort, overruling the expressed desire of the town to “supplement or not with 
existing available town spaces.” With the COA staff and many seniors coming and 
going, the already crowded Hartwell campus will become even busier. The need 
for holding many activities in other sites is clearer than ever.

I want to raise the issue of parking space to a high level of concern. We are 
now doing everything we can to reduce emissions in town. Replacing the old 
parking lot with new paving and adding up to 50 additional spaces for cars to 
accommodate seniors, who do not occupy the building all day, does not seem 
necessary. Activities are scheduled throughout the day so people come and go on 
staggered schedules. Moreover, holding COA activities at Bemis Hall, Pierce 
House, the school, and other town sites will minimize the need for parking at 
the Hartwell campus.

I urge everyone to get involved and take a close look at the CCBC website to 
understand the site plans, especially the substantial proposed increase of 
parking spaces. And, if you have nothing better to do, go take a walk in the 
late afternoon behind the pods to understand what will be lost and would need 
to change with each of the proposed plans. The next CCBC meeting is Wednesday, 
May 31 and will feature more detail on programming, especially attendance 
numbers, and the site plans.


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