The ‘last 20 miles’: Real estate boom, new demands threaten Maine’s working waterfront

Rockland – The potential sale of three commercial waterfront properties has the potential to bring new development and tax revenue, but also great change to the town’s character. The properties are being marketed as development opportunities for hotels, restaurants, retail or office space, residential or marine usage and are listed for sale for $13.9 million, according to the New England Commercial Property Exchange. “We expect that whatever we do will be controversial,” Ed Glaser, mayor of Rockland. Elsewhere in Rockland, the nonprofit Island Institute has been sounding the alarm about shrinking coastal frontage still available for commercial use by fishermen, boatbuilders, marinas and so on. Of Maine’s 5,300 miles of coastline, just a fraction, 20 miles, is still available for working waterfront, according to the nonprofit’s 2014 report, “The Last 20 Miles.” >click to read< 13:32

One Response to The ‘last 20 miles’: Real estate boom, new demands threaten Maine’s working waterfront

  1. Ben+Fuller says:

    As usual the baseline is flawed. Baseline should be the miles of working waterfront say a century ago not the entire coast of Maine. But 20 and 5300 reads better than say 20 and 200. But the latter really tells you the scope of the problem. How much of the working waterfront of a century ago has been lost?

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