Plans to renovate this South Water street home have been met with resistance.
Ray Ewing

No Spa or Pool For Controversial Edgartown Home

Last week, civil engineer Douglas Hoehn told the town’s conservation commission that his client, real estate investor David Malm, will no longer be moving forward with the exercise spa at 81 South Water street.

Plans for an exercise spa connected to a controversial South Water street home renovation have been scrapped after being reconsidered by the Edgartown historic district commission last month. 

Last week, civil engineer Douglas Hoehn told the town’s conservation commission that his client, real estate investor David Malm, will no longer be moving forward with the exercise spa at 81 South Water street. The decision to pull the amenity comes after several months of sparring between the applicant and Edgartown committees. 

Mr. Malm’s architects initially proposed a swimming pool at the home. That was denied by the historic district commission, which has jurisdiction over anything in view from a public way. The applicant later approached the conservation commission with an exercise spa, a water feature slightly smaller than a pool. 

The project returned to the historic district commission on Dec. 21, and commissioners voted 5-1 that the feature was still visible from a public way and would need further approval to move forward. Co-chairman Peter Rosbeck was the sole vote against. Seeking to continue apace with the home renovation, Mr. Hoehn at the Jan. 10 conservation meeting said they would not pursue either a pool or an exercise spa. 

The conservation commission went on to question the applicants on plans for a finished basement, concerned that the property, which lies within a federal flood zone and sits on top of wetlands, may flood easily. Peter Fletcher, another architect with the project, assured conservation agent Jane Varkonda that building would occur four feet above the groundwater level.

The property has also been flagged as an area of interest for the Wampanoag Tribe of Gay Head (Aquinnah), although the tribe has not yet conducted its review. 

In the public comment portion of the hearing, resident Michael Hirschfeld said the property’s former longtime gardener, Lynne Irons, had found underground springs under the property that may compromise the project’s excavation plans. He mentioned an incident at 96 South Summer street in which builders hit a spring and flooded the area.

“The entire foundation became a mud bath,” Mr. Hirschfeld said. “If they’re excavating this really huge basement excavation...and they hit a spring the way they did at 96 South Summer street...this house is going to collapse into the mud.” 

Abutting neighbor Jane Bradbury said her property at 85 South Water street floods consistently, even without the hardscape planned at 81 South Water street.

Ms. Varkonda said the commission could look into whether the property contains a spring, but the commission also had concerns that the plans did not match up with what was initially approved by the historic district commission. Mr. Ahearn maintained that the plans were identical with what was approved, although Mr. Hoehn acknowledged the plans for window wells could account for the discrepancy.

Renovation plans have received pushback from neighbors since they first approached the historic district commission last spring. Initially, residents complained that the ambitious renovation plans would block one of the last public views of Edgartown harbor, prompting the applicant to significantly scale back the project to preserve the viewshed.

“I can’t recall a case in which a plan...had no public support,” neighbor Sarah Jane Hughes said. “This plan has pretty strong opposition.”

The hearing has been continued to Jan. 24.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 01/16/2024 - 20:54

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Bob Edgartown

This is great news and maybe we have finally turned the corner with some of these local boards holding firm and not caving in to the homeowners and Architects who just want to keep building and change the fabric of the island. It is never too late to do the right thing and the right thing is to try to maintain the character of what the island was and why many want to come here.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 01/16/2024 - 22:01

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Amy Edgartown

Thank you for referring to the owner as a "real estate investor". Previous articles seem to gloss over that fact. However, a quick online search will show the true level of commercialism at play here. Multiple different Edgartown homes, bought by the same owner since 2019, are now listed for rent, an asking weekly rent of $45,000 - $75,000 weekly. This may have something to do with the lack of public/ community support. How has this business benefited this community?

Enough Already Oak Bluffs

Well, for instance, the $75,000 a week rental brings in $4,000 per week in taxes paid directly to Edgartown and $4,275 to the state. This doesn't include real estate taxes. It also creates jobs for caretakers, cleaners, landscapers etc. Owners of summer homes pay for the vast majority of municipal services on the island yet only use them for a short period of time. The amount of real estate tax that islanders pay is a small percent of the total.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 01/17/2024 - 07:04

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Rational Thinker MV

Meanwhile, Vineyard wind, can destroy and build whatever they want in the name of global warming. SMH, liberal policies continue to destroy our country, on both a federal and local level!!

Gerry Edgartown

Climate change is real and it has nothing to do with being liberal, just look at the obvious science. You can already see the effects of climate change across the island, and the effects are expected to worsen. If not wind turbines, which do not cause habitat destruction, what is your plan to decrease carbon emissions?

Robert Skydell Antigua, Guatemala

What exactly is Vineyard Wind destroying, and is it comparable to the acidification of the ocean, the rise in temperature or the level of cadmium, mercury and other highly toxic substances that acid rain has been accumulating in the fish we routinely consume? Individual aesthetic judgements aside, is it liberal policies or fossil fuels, especially coal, that is wreaking havoc on our oceans, rivers, streams and ponds?

More rational thinker The Atmosphere

Well, from up here, where the parts per million of carbon dioxide are well beyond the 350 level which is a flashpoint for the climate problem...it seems Mr. Rational Thinker is ignoring pure scientific facts. Not really rational there. The more solar and wind energy we employ, the better it will be to hopefully slow down the catastrophic impacts of climate change on all of us.

I'll use a familiar MV reference quote here, from Richard Dreyfuss in Jaws to the clueless town mayor: "you're going to ignore this particular problem until it swims up and bites you in the ass." And factually, it's already doing that.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 01/17/2024 - 10:14

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Tom Engley West Tisbury

Just because you can doesn’t mean you should. MV for sale it’s all about the money there is a culture of good old boys. You can’t ignore the facts and those facts are some town officials are in bed with owners and the contractors. There are many many good wealthy folks on MV most are generous and truly care about our little Island. But there are others who only care about their bottom line. I believe this is one of those cases it’s truly embarrassing. Push back hard on this person.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 01/19/2024 - 10:23

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Bob Kelly Oak Bluffs

I imagine the owner had some data saying it would sell for even more with a pool. If he wants this property for himself, he should have bought one that already had a pool. Glad to see them turn this request down. In the good old days, neighbors knew each other as friends and could get a vibe on how such changes would be tolerated. I doubt he has any friends here at this point.

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