
Hood Park Lands 61K SF Biotech Lease
A 151,000-square-foot addition to Catamount Management’s Hood Park development hasn’t even been approved by Boston Planning & Development Agency officials, and already nearly half of it has been spoken for.
A 151,000-square-foot addition to Catamount Management’s Hood Park development hasn’t even been approved by Boston Planning & Development Agency officials, and already nearly half of it has been spoken for.
Owners of Charlestown’s Hood Park are kicking off permitting for a 6-story addition to a recently-completed parking garage to add 154,700 square feet of office-lab space, amid discussions with potential tenants.
Greater Boston’s massive life science real estate boom largely bypassed Somerville and Charlestown in recent years as growing firms gravitated toward western suburbs instead.
As a former architect and development adviser for Colliers International, Mark Rosenshein has the savvy to help developers design and permit complex projects.
Assembly Row and Cambridge Crossing are demonstrating how once-drab industrial parcels near the elevated decks of Interstate 93 can be reinvented as successful mixed-use developments. And developers are following a similar game plan at Charlestown’s Hood Park.
Berkeley Investments has begun a 300,000-square-foot speculative redevelopment in Malden Center, where it’s marketing space at the former bank data center to office and R&D tenants.
A little over a week after the next parcel south sold for just over $10 million, a second parcel in Charlestown’s Bunker Hill Industrial Park has sold, this time for $7.2 million on July 1.
A 1.17-acre industrial property near Charlestown’s Hood Park has sold for $10.05 million.
After sitting vacant for decades amid failed redevelopment attempts, the Alexandria Hotel in Boston’s South End is due for a makeover and expansion.
Industry-leading concert promoters such as Live Nation and AEG continue to assert their market dominance, seeking to expand their reach from outdoor stadiums and arenas to mid-sized concert halls once controlled by independents.
Cambridge-based architects SMMA came up with a creative way to add more than 900 structured parking spaces at Charlestown’s Hood Park while preparing for a future in which cars are no longer king.
Updated plans for further development at Charlestown’s fully leased Hood Park include a hotel, 200 housing units, along with office and lab space that could house up to 3,500 jobs.
As the class A office market expands north of downtown Boston, the owners of Charlestown’s Hood Park are moving ahead with plans for a 450,000-square-foot office and lab building.
New redevelopment plans for Charlestown’s 20-acre Hood Park campus call for additional commercial space and parking capacity after a 4,000-seat concert hall recently was dropped from consideration.
A 4,000-seat concert hall hosting 150 shows a year and new office building are planned in next phases of Charlestown’s 20-acre Hood Park redevelopment, which recently added Cambridge College’s new campus and broke ground on a 177-unit apartment building.
The first residential building at Charlestown’s master-planned Hood Park was designed not just with Rutherford Avenue’s existing dreary industrial landscape in mind, but also its future as a walkable new neighborhood that some envision as the next Ink Block or Assembly Row.