Poor St. Clare Sisters: Difference between revisions

From Andover Answers
Jump to navigation Jump to search
mNo edit summary
mNo edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
The Poor St. Clare Sisters were forced to vacate their convent on 460 River Road, Andover due to the construction of the AvalonBay housing complex.  
In 1997 the Town of Andover entered into an agreement with Lowell and Tewksbury to provide water and sewerage to the Poor Sisters of St. Clare Convent at 460 River Road. In 2000 William McLaughlin, a developer at a company called Avalon, proposed a housing complex for the land presupposing the agreement for the water and sewerage would extend to his development.  In an attempt to block the construction of AvalonBay, area residents sponsored and article on the 2003 warrant to rescind the agreement. This would leave the Nuns without water and sewerage, so Nuns joined with Avalon and sued the Town.


In 1997 the Town of Andover entered into an agreement with Lowell and Tewksbury to provide water and sewerage to that section of River Road. In an attempt to block the construction of AvalonBay area residents sponsored and article on the 2003 warrant to rescind the agreement. This would leave the Nuns without water and sewerage, so Nuns sued the town. Ultimately the housing unit was constructed.
AvalonBay was ultimatley constructed and the Nuns were forced to vacate the property.


See
Andover Vertical File - Housing
*"Residents: Apartment Complex Would Ruin Neighborhood", ''Townsman'', July 13, 2000, page 15
*"No Green  Lights for AvalonBay Housing", Townsman, July 19, 2001
*"As Court Ponders, AvalonBay Buys", ''Townsman'', March, 24, 2005
*"AvalonBay Wins Legal Battle Against Town", Townsman, December 26, 2006, p.3
*"


<br style="clear:both;" />
<br style="clear:both;" />

Revision as of 16:27, 2 October 2007

In 1997 the Town of Andover entered into an agreement with Lowell and Tewksbury to provide water and sewerage to the Poor Sisters of St. Clare Convent at 460 River Road. In 2000 William McLaughlin, a developer at a company called Avalon, proposed a housing complex for the land presupposing the agreement for the water and sewerage would extend to his development. In an attempt to block the construction of AvalonBay, area residents sponsored and article on the 2003 warrant to rescind the agreement. This would leave the Nuns without water and sewerage, so Nuns joined with Avalon and sued the Town.

AvalonBay was ultimatley constructed and the Nuns were forced to vacate the property.

See Andover Vertical File - Housing

  • "Residents: Apartment Complex Would Ruin Neighborhood", Townsman, July 13, 2000, page 15
  • "No Green Lights for AvalonBay Housing", Townsman, July 19, 2001
  • "As Court Ponders, AvalonBay Buys", Townsman, March, 24, 2005
  • "AvalonBay Wins Legal Battle Against Town", Townsman, December 26, 2006, p.3
  • "


--Eleanor 14:49, October 2, 2007 (EDT)

back to Main Page