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Major developments either recently opened, completed, underway, or planned are driving that change through more than 2,400 new apartments and condos—and the thousands of fresh residents these projects will surely bring. Here are the 12 most consequential.
The shuttered Italian Renaissance Revival church and its courtyard are slated to become 63 condos and a 48-space parking garage (with 25 more spaces designated at a nearby carpark). The condos in the complex, dubbed the Cosmopolitan, would range from studios to 3-BRs.
The city in February 2015 signed off on a two-building, 560-unit apartment complex for the old Graybar Electric site. It will also include tens of thousands of square feet of retail and amenity space.
This under-construction church conversion is due to include 33 condos. Closings have already started and several condos have been listed in the low seven figures.
The old SoWa Vintage Market was converted into 30 apartments and gallery space. Leasing for the apartments started in September 2015. One-bedrooms start at $2,500 and 2-BRs at $2,875.
This address is the locus of a two-building, 3.1-acre development due to include 710 apartments, plus 14,000 square feet of retail space and 40,000 square feet of offices (the development also includes a refurbishment of 660 Harrison Avenue). The taller of the two buildings, 19 stories, will be the tallest new construction in the South End.
Plans emerged at the end of 2015 for a conversion that will likely produce 300,000 square feet of residences and retail where the shuttered Quinzani's Bakery and Ho Kong Bean Sprout Co. now loom. Stay tuned.
The shuttered Italian Renaissance Revival church and its courtyard are slated to become 63 condos and a 48-space parking garage (with 25 more spaces designated at a nearby carpark). The condos in the complex, dubbed the Cosmopolitan, would range from studios to 3-BRs.
The city in February 2015 signed off on a two-building, 560-unit apartment complex for the old Graybar Electric site. It will also include tens of thousands of square feet of retail and amenity space.
This under-construction church conversion is due to include 33 condos. Closings have already started and several condos have been listed in the low seven figures.
The old SoWa Vintage Market was converted into 30 apartments and gallery space. Leasing for the apartments started in September 2015. One-bedrooms start at $2,500 and 2-BRs at $2,875.
This address is the locus of a two-building, 3.1-acre development due to include 710 apartments, plus 14,000 square feet of retail space and 40,000 square feet of offices (the development also includes a refurbishment of 660 Harrison Avenue). The taller of the two buildings, 19 stories, will be the tallest new construction in the South End.
Plans emerged at the end of 2015 for a conversion that will likely produce 300,000 square feet of residences and retail where the shuttered Quinzani's Bakery and Ho Kong Bean Sprout Co. now loom. Stay tuned.