The lot for the proposed inn has been vacant since 2004.
MVC

Neighbors Object to Oak Bluffs Inn Proposal

<p>Neighbors took issue with a plan to build a three-story, four-room inn on a vacant lot at 14 Narragansett avenue in Oak Bluffs during a public hearing Thursday.</p>

Neighbors took issue with a plan to build a three-story, four-room inn on a vacant lot at 14 Narragansett avenue in Oak Bluffs during a public hearing Thursday.

Pitched as the Four Sisters Inn, the project includes the construction of a two and a half-story, 4,000 square foot inn that would be open year round and have capacity for eight guests. The inn would also include a separate bedroom for the innkeeper.

Project applicants are Elizabeth and Harry Marshall, who purchased the vacant property from Dominique Milton in 2011 for $460,000. A previous two-story, five-bedroom structure was torn down in 2004, according to the commission. The lot has been vacant since.

The project is within the Cottage City Historic District in Oak Bluffs and is subject to a separate architectural review by the Cottage City Historic District Commission. Elevations provided to the Martha's Vineyard Commission show an eclectic Victorian structure in keeping with the other homes in the area, according to a commission staff report.

Arguing that the proposed inn was too big and would complicate an already stressful parking shortage, abutters voiced a number of concerns during the project’s first public hearing last Thursday night.

“None of the houses on our end of the street are three stories high,” said next-door neighbor Rita Bartolomeu. She added that the previous home at 14 Narragansett was far smaller than the proposed inn.

Ms. Bartolomeu said her main issue was parking, but also raised concerns about quality of life in a neighborhood that already sustains the busy Pequot Hotel.

“I have a hotel behind me and now I’m going to have an inn beside me,” Ms. Bartolomeu said. “I have an issue with privacy, the coming and goings…. I listen to the Pequot’s dryer 24/7.”

The hotel’s HVAC compressors and condensers and its outdoor shower also abut her property and are visible from her back porch, she said.

Narragansett avenue homeowners Gina and John Albanese and Arthur Bates joined Ms. Bartolomeu in challenging the application.

“I’m very concerned about parking,” Mr. Bates said. “The area fills up, and it’s very crowded.”

Some homes in the neighborhood have no parking at all, the Albaneses said.

As proposed, the Marshalls’ Four Sisters Inn would have one space for staff but no parking for guests.

The couple have said they will discourage guests from bringing cars to the Island, but that has not reassured the neighbors who spoke Thursday.

“I would have no problem if it was a house … but we’re going to have strangers coming,” Mr. Albanese said.

“You’re paying five, six, seven, eight hundred dollars a night to stay in an inn, you’re bringing a car if you want to bring a car,” he said.

Commissioner and real estate broker Christine Todd, who lives on nearby Pennacook avenue, said an already-tight parking situation has been worsened in recent years by the proliferation of short-term rentals.

“I have sold … five houses in my neighborhood, on my street, in past two and a half years that used to be occupied by year-round resident single families, and now they have turned into rental properties,” Ms. Todd said.

“This is a trend that’s happening everywhere on the Island,” she added.

Former property owner Dominique Milton said resident parking permits could help resolve the problem, and architect Chuck Sullivan, representing the couple, agreed that parking permits like those used in Ocean Park would be worth trying.

“Something needs to happen. I think everyone can agree to that,” Mr. Sullivan said.

Ms. Marshall, who joined the online meeting with her husband, sought to ease neighbors’ concerns.

“This is a labor of love for us. We want to be innkeepers. We want to live on the property. We want to control the property…We will be part of the inn and we will be present year round,” she said.

The couple do not want to run a large operation and are limiting guests to eight, Ms. Marshall said.

“The Pequot is big enough already,” she said.

The commission's Four Sisters Inn hearing continues Nov. 10.

In other business Thursday, the commission deliberated on and approved the proposed Red Arrow Farm affordable housing community adjoining Island Co-Housing in West Tisbury.

South Mountain Company is proposing to purchase 3.17 acres from Island Co-Housing to build six structures, including four houses with 11 total bedrooms and shared facilities for parking and storage.

The commission found that the loss of open space was more than balanced by the benefit to Island housing, voting 10-1 to approve the project.

Commissioner Ernest Thomas was the sole nay vote.

The commission also announced the hire of Laura Silber as a housing planner. Ms. Silber has served as the coalition coordinator for the Coalition to Create a Martha’s Vineyard Housing Bank.

Capping the nearly three-hour meeting, commissioners signed their written decision denying the demolition application for a house on Arlington avenue in Oak Bluffs.

For its next meeting Oct. 20, the commission has a packed agenda with a modification review for The Yard in Chilmark and tentatively one for the Outermost Inn in Aquinnah, a public hearing on changes at the West Chop Club and continued public hearings on the proposed Martha’s Vineyard Hospital/Navigator Homes project in Edgartown and a demolition request on Look street in Vineyard Haven.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 10/15/2022 - 14:19

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Lorraine Edgartown

I do not live in Oak Bluffs but I understand the concerns of the neighbors of the proposed inn on Narragansett..HVAC systems, running day and night, compressors, pool equipment in some instances, all noise pollution which is taking over as people demand air conditioning year round, pool equipment running year round, drowns out the sound of the song birds, it is almost impossible now to find a quiet spot and add in light pollution, peaceful and quiet enjoyment of one's property and home is becoming hard to come by. I notice one parking space and none for guests of this inn?? That does not make any sense. Parking is a problem everywhere, but certainly some parking should be required for a four bedroom ,eight guest inn?

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 10/16/2022 - 21:16

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Bob Edgartown

How much staff does Martha’s Vineyard Commission have now and they just hired another person. There’s no one watching the fox running the henhouse the budget of the commission with all the salaries and benefits it’s getting out of control. When will the island wake up and realize the MVC is not as needed as it once was and we cannot afford it anymore. I also read they are in court again what is the legal budget up to now?

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 10/17/2022 - 17:54

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skip OB

Our family house is on Pequot opposite the Pequot Hotel that abuts this property and like the rest of our neighbors - probably isn’t looking for more parked cars in the tiny, historic neighborhood. This isn’t Edgartown. Call me opposed.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 10/17/2022 - 22:58

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RobbyK Oak Bluffs

Letting an Inn be built on Narragansett Avenue would destroy a piece of Oak Bluffs deep in history, diversity, culture and architecture.
The infrastructure of the street cannot handle more parking, very few homes even have a space to park one car let alone space for eight guests. As it is, the street is used as a “shortcut“ for people leaving circuit Avenue and trying to get to Seaview. There are families with lots of young kids who ride bikes, skate, walk & play on that street year round. The traffic is a major concern,
But quality of life for the abutters is hugely important. The Bartolomeu’s/ Nunziato’s
have kept their home in pristine condition, cleared the weeds and trash on the proposed lot that the owners have ignored for years; and now the lots owners want to build an inn to detrimentally impact an incredible neighborhood.. I would beg those who make this decision to actually take into consideration the safety of the neighborhood, the abutters, parking and ultimately environmental impact that such a monstrosity would create. I hope the leaders that make these decisions will use incredible common sense and reasoning and listen to the neighbors who have real concerns. Stop the Inn. This isn’t a housing issue this is greed and taking advantage of a neighborhood that definitely cannot handle such an impact.
Robby K
Oak Bluffs

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 10/18/2022 - 00:55

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George Stein OB

This would set an irrevocable precedent. The proposal is about a business operation that has absolutely no inherent interest in respect for a quality of life for the immediate surrounding community.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 10/18/2022 - 09:18

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Dominique Milton Narragansett Ave

Corrwction - The house that we tore down on this lot consiated of Four (4) apartments totalling 4 kitchens, 4 bathrooms, and 5 bedrooms -

Yes - parking will comtinue to be an issue until we get resident parking signs and an allocated amount of parking spaces for each homeowner without a driveway .

Finally - I am curious to see if the house elevations make the building any taller then the Pequot hotel that also operates without proper parking spaces.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 10/18/2022 - 11:48

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Christine Senge

The proliferation of week-long rentals needs to be examined by the MVC. We had a lovely couple next door who spent 6 months on the island and 6 in Florida. They sold to a woman from Philadelphia, who said it would be her summer home. This was not true. She turned it into a weekly rental for the entire summer. And each Sunday, all summer long, a stream of vehicles come and go: the realtor, the cleaning crew, the linen service, the bike rental truck, the kayak rental truck and the renters for the week. Our once quiet OB cul-de-sac is now filled with traffic and noise each Sunday.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 02/19/2023 - 07:59

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Dominique Milton Oak Bluffs

The Town needs to pass a resident only parking law. We have people coming feom all ovwr parking in front of our homes and then walking downtown or to the beach. Residential Only parking is needed immediately.

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