
Hot Property: Gibson Point
Revere’s newest apartment complex is promoting a wellness-focused amenity package as it begins preleasing for move-ins in September.
Revere’s newest apartment complex is promoting a wellness-focused amenity package as it begins preleasing for move-ins in September.
A recent wave of high-end housing developments in Revere has shifted the conversation to production of affordable and workforce housing, potentially including several large public parcels near transit.
Revere Mayor Brian Arrigo is asking a judge to put a 1986 apartment tower overlooking Revere Beach into receivership, whose landlord has allegedly failed to help its tenants relocate after a high-profile fire.
In the grand sweep of history, transit-oriented development is nothing new in Boston, as epitomized by Revere’s former Wonderland amusement park.
Four Blue Line stops in East Boston and Revere will go offline to riders for two and a half weeks in May, adding to a previously delayed 14-day shutdown on the line’s other end designed to accelerate repair work, officials announced Monday.
One of the first in a growing line of new, transit-oriented rental complexes along Revere Beach has sold again.
Boston developer Redgate Capital Partners is proposing Revere’s latest large multifamily development: a 291-unit project just across the water from several proposed luxury developments in Lynn.
Revere planning officials have green-lit another large apartment complex overlooking Revere Beach, this time far to the north of the MBTA’s Wonderland Blue Line and bus station.
In recent years, Revere has seen the construction of thousands of new apartment units and the opening of new hotels, restaurants and shops. But the activity has been so intense and rapid that many are concerned that it may one day squeeze out many of its largely immigrant and working-class residents.
Another seaside parking lot in Revere Beach looks set to be replaced with a multifamily development.
Owners of new apartment buildings in the Boston area are facing unprecedented times trying to fill units amid the coronavirus outbreak and economic downturn that’s left many would-be tenants wary of moving into unfamiliar and oftentimes more expensive living quarters.
Today caps off another momentous year in Massachusetts’ commercial real estate landscape, with massive new projects rising across downtown and in once-unremarkable neighborhoods. Here are our five most popular commercial real estate stories from 2019.
There’s a crucial element of any commercial real estate deal in Revere. And it usually comes in a small squeeze bottle.
A shopping center adjacent to Revere Beach has sold to a developer who sees redevelopment potential in the site.
Municipal elections across Greater Boston yesterday served as de facto forums on development, among other issues, and voters rewarded both pro- and anti-development candidates.
A 305-unit apartment complex across from Revere Beach has opened a marketing center and beguin preleasing preleasing in preparation for October move-ins.
Redevelopment of Revere’s former Wonderland greyhound racetrack property could be around the corner with the selection of a brokerage to market the 34-acre site.
A property on Revere Beach near Elliot Circle has sold for $4.12 million, clearing the way for a 60-unit apartment development proposed for the site.
A 145-unit apartment complex called BLVD at Revere Beach will include a mix of studio, one- and two-bedroom units with 5,800 square feet of resident amenities.
A $3.6 million MassWorks infrastructure grant will go toward a $90 million hotel and residential complex near Revere’s Beachmont MBTA station.