After nearly four months of back-and-forth, the Edgartown historic district commission approved a controversial home renovation on South Water street. A pool originally included was scrapped.
After nearly four months of back-and-forth, the Edgartown historic district commission approved a controversial home renovation on South Water street Thursday.
The proposed renovation of 81 South Water street from architect Patrick Ahearn, on behalf of homeowner and real estate mogul David Malm, had drawn backlash from dozens of neighbors and residents when it was first presented in April. Most were concerned that the plans would jeopardize one of the last public views of the Edgartown harbor.
Since then, Mr. Ahearn submitted multiple applications significantly scaling down the proposed modifications at the request of the commission. On Thursday, the project received the final go-ahead provided that Mr. Ahearn eliminate a proposed pool from the application entirely.
The pool, which would have faced Edgartown harbor and included a stone retaining wall and 36-inch fencing, had been a significant sticking point for the commission. Both commission chair Julia Tarka and commissioner James Cisek felt the pool was inappropriate for the property, which once housed the Vineyard’s first governor, Thomas Mayhew.
In hopes of finally getting approval, Mr. Ahearn opted to scrap the pool plans from his application. A motion to approve the home renovation without the pool, fencing, and retaining wall passed 4-2.
Ms. Tarka and Mr. Cisek both voted against the project but did not elaborate on their positions. Ms. Tarka noted that in the event that Mr. Ahearn’s client decided to pursue a pool later, the historic district commission would still need to review. Any harbor-facing pool would be visible from the harbor, a public way, putting it in the historic district commission’s purview, she said.
“At this juncture we will not be considering the pool any further…not to this board for sure,” Mr. Ahearn told the commission.
The hearing had originally been scheduled for July 20 but had been postponed after town counsel recommended that residents receive more time to review the updated plans. The rescheduled meeting on August 3 was closed to public comment, but multiple letters from abutters complained about what they saw as an incomplete and rushed application. The proposed renovation had gone through seven iterations — including one application that contained three different potential plans — before receiving final approval.
The project will next move to the conservation commission.
Residents who had previously spoken against the renovations acknowledged the new plans were greatly improved from what had been proposed earlier this spring, even if some features, like the building’s distinctive turret, had been changed.
“I would have wished the commission had hung in a little bit longer and gotten a somewhat better result,” resident Michael Hirschfeld said after the hearing. “They got sort of half the cake or maybe less than half the cake.”
Someone walking on South Water street won’t be able to see the turret under the new plans, he said.
“In an ideal world, I would have liked to see [more historic elements] preserved,” Mr. Hirschfeld said. “But nothing’s perfect.”

Comments
At some point there are no
John Aldeborgh KatamaAt some point there are no winners in buying a house in Edgartown or on the island for that matter. Everything has become so hugely regulated, bureaucratic, political (who you hire because of connections), massively time consuming, complicated and staggeringly expensive it’s mind numbing. I can’t figure out who is possibly benefiting from the monster that’s been created over my lifetime, heck, just in the years since we built our place in 1995. I know who the biggest losers are, the 99% without any question, which are the ones the politicians and officials are supposed to work for. As an aside, anything that David Malm and Patrick Ahearn do in partnership will be both aesthetically appropriate and of extreme quality, both individuals are professionals with deep roots in the community.
I am opposed to the large
Bill EdgartownI am opposed to the large scale building going on at the expense of any and all open space,but I can't help but view the neighbors as hypocrites. They hold vigils and demand a public uproar in opposition to the plans. They are only concerned with their own property values and sight lines. If the show was on the other foot they would do what they want. Please stop the hypocrisy and don't pretend that your fighting the good fight for the public.
This architect’s work has
Jason Roberts Edg/NycThis architect’s work has been defiling the aesthetic of historic seaside communities for decades now. When will his clients realize that this is historic degradation not preservation, or do they care? Edgartown is lucky to have a historic commission to watch over this, but these projects do nothing but erode historic continuity over the years.
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