A New Addition to Worcester’s Canal District
AKROS Development’s 105-unit multifamily project at 102 Temple St. in Worcester will include a pocket park, retail space and outdoor seating while buffering the Canal District from Interstate 290.
AKROS Development’s 105-unit multifamily project at 102 Temple St. in Worcester will include a pocket park, retail space and outdoor seating while buffering the Canal District from Interstate 290.
Real estate was always a side hustle for Ricky Beliveau until a series of condo conversions opened the door to a new career. Six years later, he’s working to build a 21-story luxury tower in Everett’s rapidly-transforming industrial zone.
For-profit multifamily developers that have shied away from Massachusetts’ Gateway Cities because their rents didn’t support the cost of new construction are betting on Worcester’s economic and population growth to push projects across the finish line.
With its biotech incubators nearly full and biomanufacturing developers building out new production facilities, Worcester is looking to fill the missing link in its life science ecosystem.
With construction costs at the new Worcester Red Sox stadium and its surrounding six-building redevelopment project rising, City Manager Ed Augustus is asking for the city to OK tweaks to the public financing package.
With construction activities ramping up around the planned new ballpark and mixed-use developments in Worcester’s Canal District, a key contract has been awarded that will let the projects move forward.
One of the largest industrial businesses in Worcester’s growing Canal District has officially opened a just-completed cold storage facility in a nearby neighborhood.
Worcester’s kicking up a lot of dust these days – literally. Development is taking place across the city, with investment coming from a new wave of developers and investors who recognize the high quality, lower-cost alternative that Worcester provides to the Greater Boston market.
The Worcester Redevelopment Authority is poised to vote tomorrow to approve Gilbane Building Co. and AECOM Hunt as the project managers for the city’s newest professional sports facility.
Sorry, but no city needs to blow $100 million in a bid to pump up civic pride. Especially Worcester, which struggles each day to pay for basic services like schools and police.