Why Local Banking Is Essential for Massachusetts
Amid a wave of innovation, one truth remains: local banking remains essential – not just for convenience, but for the economic health of Massachusetts.
Amid a wave of innovation, one truth remains: local banking remains essential – not just for convenience, but for the economic health of Massachusetts.
These pieces charted the challenges, innovations, big ideas and criticism in the real estate, housing policy and urbanism worlds.
By focusing so intently on rental development and preservation, Massachusetts also risks neglecting the importance of addressing barriers to homeownership.
As we approach 2026, transaction volume in the Greater Boston multifamily market has rebounded, and investors remain bullish about the region.
MBTA Communities Act opponents deride it as an “unfunded mandate” even though academic studies show multifamily housing usually pays more than the services it consumes.
CEDAC’s financing and technical assistance programs have contributed to the production or preservation of over 455,000 homes statewide
Building resilient commercial corridors means changing the way communities engage, access resources and build long-term networks.
The transformation of 1200 Massachusetts Ave. in Harvard Square blends architectural preservation, modern innovation and a reinvestment in the cultural and residential fabric of Cambridge.
Massachusetts must center design throughout the entire life cycle of housing: how we regulate, finance, build and live together.
State legislators are considering a commission to study an idea that could create 130,000 new homes in Greater Boston. Towns and cities could be moving even faster.
This year did not bring half the success we wanted, but the successes we did see brought hope to build upon at the state and local level.
The people buying homes in America these days show real estate agents need to rethink where they focus their lead-generating energy next year.
Unlocking housing supply in Massachusetts will also require serious reforms in building code, development oversight and dimensional regulation.
There’s a rising fascination with helping homebuyers access their first homes. But it won’t fix the core issue: We don’t create many new affordable homes for sale.
The conversation on Beacon Hill has become sharper and more candid, new polling shows voters want deeper, faster action and pro-housing candidates are winning office.
You walk into a listing appointment, really connect with the sellers and nail your listing presentation. Then they say they’ll get back to you. What do you do next?
International capital is flowing back into Boston’s high-end real estate while local entrepreneurs are competing for the same premium properties.
Vacancy reached a new all-time high of 36.1 percent and asking rents continued to decline. But green shoots give reason for hope.
Economic and political headwinds have dampened travel spending and kept hotel operators focused on managing rising costs. Next year could be better.