Politics & Government

Union Square Post Office Officially on Market for $2.5 Million

The city is interested in seeing the building become a performing arts center, but it doesn't have plans to acquire the property on its own for that purpose.

The United States Postal Service,  announced it would seek to sell the , officially put the building on the market a couple of weeks ago, according to an email from Dennis Tarmey, a spokesperson for the Post Office.

The building, which opened in 1936, according to Tarmey, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is on the market for $2.5 million. The lobby of the building painted by the Works Progress Administration during the Great Depression.

Not a closure

The Post Office is not planning to close Union Square as a location, Tarmey emphasized in his email. Rather, the postal service is looking to sell the current building at 237 Washington St. and maintain a "retail presence" in Union Square.

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"We may shift our retail part of our operation to a smaller nearby location and provide the same retail services (postage sales, post office boxes, etc.)," Tarmey wrote in the email. He said the Post Office would move its carrier operation to the Incoming Mail Center in Chelsea.

The Union Square Post Office would only move if the postal service is able to sell the current building and acquire about 2000 square feet of retail space, "preferably in the Union Square area," Tarmey wrote.

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The Post Office announced in January plans to close 3700 locations across the country, but it had no plans to close offices in Somerville. Some Post Office sites in nearby communities were slated for closure (two in Medford, two in Cambridge, two in Arlington).

Performing arts center plans

The Post Office had over a year ago.

Initially, the city of Somerville had considered  and turn it into a performing arts center.

With the property officially on the market, the city is still interested in seeing the building used in that capacity, according to city spokesperson Tom Champion, but Somerville is not looking to foot the bill on its own.

"Acquisition and operating costs would be prohibitive for the city," he said.

Champion said converting the building into a performing arts center would be consistent with the city's comprehensive plan for Union Square, which seeks to maintain the area as a destination for arts and culture.

It would also fit well with restrictions placed on the building as an historic site. The building's new owner would have to .

If a nonprofit organization wanted to pursue a performing arts project at the site, the city might be interested in a partnership, Champion said.


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