Robert Sawyer came to the Martha's Vineyard Commission Thursday seeking permission to knock down a historic home to make way for a new 8-unit housing complex. The MVC said it needed more information before it could decide.
The developer of a proposed Oak Bluffs housing project clashed with regulators this week over what information was needed in an application.
Robert Sawyer came to the Martha’s Vineyard Commission Thursday to ask for permission to demolish a historic home at 3 Uncas avenue in order to build an 8-unit workforce housing complex. Plans to knock down the deteriorating 150-year old home, once owned by a whaling captain who was influential in the creation of Oak Bluffs, have been denied by town boards in the past and the commission this week said it did not have enough information to fully consider the project.
Commissioners said they needed more details on several items, including things as basic as linear dimensions of the proposed new building. Commissioner Peter Wharton said the MVC has jurisdiction to examine data on traffic, wastewater, and potential impacts on municipal services on all projects. Much of this was lacking in Mr. Sawyer’s application, filed under the state’s 40B housing law.
Two of the units would be restricted to people who make under 80 per cent of the area median income, but there were questions about if the units would available to rent or to own, and exactly what income brackets, if any, Mr. Sawyer would impose on the remaining six units in the building.
“We have to have that information that was requested in order give you an opinion, approval or not,” Mr. Wharton said.
Mr. Sawyer’s lawyer Jay Talerman was reticent about getting into too many details on parameters that he felt were instead under the jurisdiction of the Oak Bluffs zoning board of appeals, which also would need to review the 40B project.
“I’m happy to answer some questions, especially about the 40B process and how we see it shaping up,” he said. “We’re also happy to go through at the MVC level matters of truly regional concern that wouldn’t be duplicated at the zoning board of appeals.”
Mr. Sawyer purchased the home on Uncas avenue in 2018, and said that the property is now inhabitable and in a decrepit state.
After trying for five years to get the new project approved, Mr. Sawyer said he wanted to stop funding the idea if the MVC wasn’t going to approve the demolition.
“We are highly reluctant to throw good money after bad, so let me say this at the outset, if the commission decides in its wisdom to approve our project… we would absolutely be responsive to any reasonable submissions that the commission might want,” he said. “But if the commission is not going to approve us, then our spending more money is just down the drain.”
Mr. Sawyer lamented the potential of squandering a chance to create more housing for an Island in desperate need, but the commission was reluctant to move forward with what it saw as an unfinished application.
“We don’t have enough information,” said commissioner Doug Sederholm. “We couldn’t possibly make a determination about the demolition without [an independent engineering consultant] inspecting the building and reporting to us on that.”
Some neighbors have questioned Mr. Sawyer’s handling of the building, saying the home got to this point in a strategy coined “demolition by neglect.” Several abutters spoke out against the project, with objections to traffic generated by the housing project and the demolition of the historic home.
The house belonged to Stephen Flanders, a Chilmark whaling captain and politician who was a critical part of helping Oak Bluffs become its own town in 1880.
Mr. Talerman acknowledged the history and said he was open to someone taking the house and moving it, but he wasn’t sure the structure would be up to such a challenge.
“We have always been welcome to the notion that someone could pick it up and move it if they wanted,” he said. “I have doubts that it would survive that but we are willing to do that.”
The commission continued the hearing on the project to June 6.
The proceedings Thursday were delayed several minutes after multiple so-called “Zoom bombers” made anti-semitic and racist remarks. MVC staff eventually kicked them out of the meeting before continuing with applications.

Comments
I’m going to agree with Mr
Tom engley West TisburyI’m going to agree with Mr Sawyer. What are u waiting for this is over reach. Do you expect him to put money into it we need housing now this has gone on way too long. Mr Sawyer has created many good jobs in OB. Come on man.
Let us go back to 2019 and
T Ewell Hopkins (he/him) Oak BluffsLet us go back to 2019 and keep this recent hearing in context. Please read the Oak Bluffs Planning Board file available on-line. https://www.oakbluffsma.gov/387/3-Uncas-Ave
Thank you, Ewell. We lived on
Shelly Jones Vineyard HavenThank you, Ewell. We lived on Hiawatha Ave. when the Bowling Alley was built. At that time, this house was inhabited by the McInnis family. It could have been renovated as it was. Instead, it is as if it was intentionally left to deteriorate.
Completely agree - there were
Bob Kelly Oak BluffsCompletely agree - there were people living there 10 years ago as I recall. This and another house that is kitty corner from the Oceanview are purposely set to rot by design so they can build something much bigger in it's place. This should remain a residential lot - let them have 3 units not 8 and just give them a bit of a bigger footprint but it should remain looking like a house. Let developers go else where as the buy a house so shouldn't be surprised when all they can get is a house!
I'm sorry Shelly but your
Lisa Stewart Crisp OakBluffsI'm sorry Shelly but your information is incorrect.
My family owned that house for over 50 years until we were forced out by Mr Sawyer and company. After many misrepresentations to us and the other abutters, we finally gave up and sold to them. I wish we had this historical information at the time. It was a summer cottage and very inhabitable and we were there until right before closing. Whatever happened to the house was due to willful neglect by the present owners. I still cannot go by there as it is painful to see it in such condition. Due to our experience, I would take any plans offered by these people with a huge grain of salt.
Additionally, as a comment to the proposed overlay districts in Oak Bluffs, the bowling alley is an example of what can happen when you drop a very active and loud business right in the middle of a neighborhood. The bowling alley while very popular still had a negative effect on the surrounding neighborhood and those who lived there.
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