The sum is not that much for Boston—though nationally it can be quite the price tag. What does it command in the city? Our latest Curbed Comparisons finds out.
The region’s neighborhoods can be divided into three tiers: The $1,000-a-square-foot-and-up neighborhoods, the middle tier of $500 to $999 a foot, and the under-$500-a-foot ones.
A six-story portion of the complex at 1550 Soldiers Field Road would include 211 market-rate apartments. The other half would house 38 income-restricted condos at 21 Soldiers Field Place.
The apartments would run from studios to three-bedrooms under plans that KIG Real Estate Advisors filed with the city. Fifteen of the apartments would be restricted to households making no more than 70 percent of the area’s median income.
The 1,700-square-foot, six-room colonial at 60 Undine Road dates from 1932. The house offers three bedrooms, one and a half bathrooms, and the chance spruce things up a bit.
There’s a lot going up in and around Boston as 2018 chugs along. Here’s a map of major developments to watch during the next 12 months. Consider it an explainer for the scaffolding and cones you’ll encounter.
A restored version of the sign that bestrode the movie house for decades before it and an Applebee’s were sold to make way for a mixed-use development will be unveiled on September 13.
The city’s single-family market is one of the most competitive of its kind in the U.S. Case in point: These four houses that sold recently after only relatively short periods of time on the block.
Our latest Curbed Comparisons tackles condos asking around $800K—a hefty sum, to be sure, but one not all that expensive by Boston standards. This selection includes duplexes in Brighton and Southie as well as a one-bedroom in the South End.
The median price for a single-family home in Massachusetts crested $400,000 for the first time in June, according to the state’s Association of Realtors. How far does just under that go in Boston these days?
Unit 3 at 72 Saybrook Street runs to only 835 square feet. But the condo—on the third floor of a three-floor building—appears a lot roomier, thanks in large part to cathedral ceilings and plenty of natural light, including via skylights in said ceilings.
A proposed development has cut the number of planned units to 210 from 250. The 3.3-acre project will also contain 220 parking spaces—or more than the traditional 1-to-1 ratio for Boston development.
Residents between the ages of 18 and 34 make up at least 40 percent of the population in six different areas of the city, according to a new analysis. Whether they’ll stick around is another matter.
Our latest Curbed Comparisons tackles the half-million market in places such as Dorchester, Back Bay, and Jamaica Plain. What’s it command? The short answer is: It depends. The long answer is after the jump.
The busiest time of the leasing year is nearly upon us, so we’re looking at different price points in different markets. Five grand a month apparently lands tenants at least two bedrooms, but parking? Don’t count on it.
Through a filing with the city, grocery concern Stop & Shop has made its intentions official regarding an 11-acre parcel in the Brighton-Allston borderlands. It’s even named its proposed mega-development.
The average asking tag for a market-rate home in Allston is $557 a square foot right now, while the average in neighboring Brighton is $472 a square foot, according to a new analysis. Let’s drill deeper, shall we?
Grocery concern Stop & Shop wants to building up to 1,010 housing units on an 11-acre site adjacent to the ginormous Boston Landing complex in the Brighton-Allston borderlands.
At the $800K mark, a prospective buyer is probably tipping into the expensive end of the city’s housing market. What does flirting with such territory buy right now? Let’s find out.
The residential component of the 15.2-acre Boston Landing project on Boston’s western edge just announced that John Hancock Financial has joined the project, further ensuring an early 2018 opening.
A Brookline-based developer wants to replace a one-story office building, a single-family house, and a vacant lot along Market Street with a five-story apartment development. There would be plenty of parking, too.
All 10 are condos, first of all. Second, there really isn’t that much of a gap between that priciest listing—for an 801-square-foot 1-BR at 1404 Commonwealth Avenue—and the most expensive, a 1,573-square-foot 3-BR at 16 Peacable Street.
Just north of $700K has become an unusually active price point in the city. What’s that amount buy you right now? Let’s take a look in five different neighborhoods.
The 10 smallest condos for sale in Boston right now range from a 255-square-foot studio in Beacon Hill to a 442-square-foot one in Brighton. In between, there are all manner of toeholds in the city's continuously vicious property market.
The average asking price of a Malden condo is $297 a square foot, according to a new analysis.That puts Malden condos, on average, on par with the cheapest properties in Boston’s Brighton and Jamaica Plain.
The average asking price in the busy, busy neighborhood is $469 a square foot, according to a new analysis. A wide range of tags, though, gets us to that average.