Community Good Works
From creative ways to fight hunger and boost local businesses to funding to preserve vital history, banks and real estate developers gave back in several ways in recent weeks.
From creative ways to fight hunger and boost local businesses to funding to preserve vital history, banks and real estate developers gave back in several ways in recent weeks.
From new VPs to fresh project managers, see who’s been hired, promoted and honored: it’s The Personnel File.
From school supplies – both digital and analogue – to large donations, construction companies, developers, unions and local lenders gave back in many ways this week.
The timeline for construction of the MBTA’s West Station in Allston is still in flux, but a Brookline developer is planning for the transit hub’s future arrival as it moves forward with permitting for a $104-million apartment tower.
From new VPs to fresh project managers, see who’s been hired, promoted and honored: it’s The Personnel File.
From food pantry donations to major gifts to stave off evictions and foreclosures, local lenders, real estate groups and developers helped their community out in many ways recently.
A Brookline developer is designing an Allston apartment tower to open a connection from the Packards Corner area to the MBTA’s planned West Station.
Massachusetts’ developers, credit unions and banks gave hundreds of thousands of dollars away to their communities as the economic effects of the COVID-19 pandemic continue to rock the region.
Banks and commercial real estate firms donated hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash and in-kind gifts to efforts across the state to respond to COVID-19 in recent days.
Wood-frame construction and other cost-cutting strategies are becoming the norm across Greater Boston as developers, contractors and architects grapple grappling with rising commodity and labor costs that make it increasingly difficult to keep projects within budget.
City Realty Group has begun construction of Tempo, a 39-unit condominium complex at 3193 Washington St. in Jamaica Plain.
Redevelopment of the former Kindred Hospital property in Brighton would include one of the neighborhood’s largest condo components in a recent multifamily project.
HBI is planning a $5 million adaptive reuse effort, tentatively as a coworking space for area entrepreneurs and artists in the church’s sanctuary, with affordable housing units on the church’s ground level.
Brookline-based City Realty Group has acquired 270 Parson St. in Brighton for $3 million from Eastern Equity Partners LLC of Lynnfield.