It will never look like that. Its a specific angle and a TON of parallax. I still think it will be a nice project however.
cca
What does everyone think the 109 condos are going to go for? $/sq ft?
One bedrooms in basic brownstones have been going for $700-750/sqft in Fenway. I'd guess they're going to ask $850-900/sqft since these will be in a luxury building with amenities, while also being right next to the T.
One bedrooms in basic brownstones have been going for $700-750/sqft in Fenway. I'd guess they're going to ask $850-900/sqft since these will be in a luxury building with amenities, while also being right next to the T.
What!?
Most one-bedroom apartments in Fenway rent for between $2100 and $2500/month.
https://www.jumpshell.com/posts/cheap-apartments-in-boston
Wrong. Read the page I linked to.
No. You're wrong. Read the page I linked to. Scroll to the interactive graphic near the bottom. The purchase price per-square-foot, is thankfully much lower than that.
Imagine if the purchase price per square foot of a one-bedroom was $2100. That would mean an average 900 square-foot one-bedroom would go for ~$2m. That would be insane! Thankfully, you're wrong.
If you want to see this on the micro level rather than the aggregate, go to zillow.com. The nearest non-studio to this parcel that is currently on the market for under $800/month, is a one room sublet in Allston.
Something tells me you haven't been trying to rent apartments, or buy property, in this area for a few years. Your guesses are multiple times removed from reality. Please don't spread misinformation.
Holy crap I don't even want to know what insane extrapolation you're using to come up with those rent --> purchase numbers. Whatever method you're using to come up with $2m is completely flawed.
Here are some properties that are on the market or were recently on:
$529k, 685 sqft = $772/sqft
$399k, 555 sqft = $720/sqft
$399k, 528 sqft = $755/sqft
edit: Those were all 1brs. Here's a 3br that is 1067 sqft and asking $649k which comes to $608/sqft. Bigger units generally have lower prices per square foot since a lot of the value comes from fixed areas like the living room and kitchen, while the additional space generally comes from additional bedrooms.
I don't imagine the hole will be very deep--there's no underground parking for this project. All parking will be in the existing Trilogy building next door (last I checked). Are they just sticking building's utilities underground?