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Final Environmental Assessment for the Boston Architectural College's (BAC) Urban Sustainability Initiative for the Renovation of Public Alley #444, Boston, Massachusetts (DOE/EA-1885) (Paperback)
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Final Environmental Assessment for the Boston Architectural College's (BAC) Urban Sustainability Initiative for the Renovation of Public Alley #444, Boston, Massachusetts (DOE/EA-1885) (Paperback)
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Loot Price R506
Discovery Miles 5 060
Expected to ship within 18 - 22 working days
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DOE prepared this EA to evaluate the potential environmental
consequences of providing $1.6 million in financial assistance
pursuant to a Congressional earmark to Boston Architectural College
(BAC) for its Urban Sustainability Initiative for the Renovation of
Public Alley #444. The financial assistance would be in the form of
cost-shared funding. This EA analyzes the potential environmental
impacts of DOE's proposed action of providing the grant funding and
the No-Action Alternative. In this EA, DOE evaluated potential
environmental impacts resulting from the proposed project on air
quality, geology and soils, biological resources - sensitive
species, water resources, cultural/historic resources, traffic,
noise, aesthetics and visual resources, and socioeconomic
resources. The proposed project would be designed in compliance
with all federal and state regulations, would reduce storm water
runoff into the Charles River Basin and would become an ongoing
tool for the BAC curriculum and community public education. The
project would include the installation of 13 to 15 open loop
geothermal wells to provide heating and cooling energy to BAC's
facilities; the installation of a green screen trellis system,
planting soils, concrete pavement, pavers, landscaping; and
mechanical upgrades (plumbing and electrical) to accommodate the
geothermal solution into the facilities. Operation of the
geothermal wells would not result in any increase in noise in the
vicinity. The aesthetics of Boston's Historic Back Bay District
community would be enhanced with the addition of the green screen
trellis system, planting soils, concrete pavement, and pavers.
After consulting with Massachusetts State Historic Preservation
Office (SHPO) DOE has determinated that this project would not have
an adverse effect on the historical Back Bay District. As part of
the Green Alley Phase II, the green screen trellis system is a vine
covered vegetated screen intended to provide an attractive visual
amenity that benefits both the public and the institution by
softening the appearance of two faces of an existing masonry block
stair tower. Developing the geothermal wells on the BAC site would
not significantly impact any population of plant or animal species.
The project site is relatively small (less than 1.0 acre) and
isolated from larger tracts of undisturbed land; nor does the area
provide any unique habitats for special species. The Indiana bat
(Myotis sodalist), an endangered species, is known to reside in
Suffolk and Middlesex counties and in various locations throughout
Massachusetts. However, given the localized construction area in
the alley and the species' tendency to not stray from its wooded
habitat, it is highly unlikely that the proposed action would have
any negative impacts on the endangered Indiana bat species.
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