Looking at recent permits for 350 Summer St, this is what I could find, dated Jan 16, 2024:
10996 | ALT1226546 | SD | Long Form/Alteration Permit | Subdivision Combining Lot | Combine 65 404 sf parcel #0602766010 with 6 air-rights parcels totaling 30 788 sf (2A 2B 120-AR-1 120-AR-2A 120-AR-3 &; 120-AR-4). Subdivide this 96 192 newly combined parcel into 2 parcels Parcel N (30 082 sf) to be known as 350-368 Summer St and Parcel P (66 110 sf) to be known as 370-410 Summer St.; | |
Building permits help to establish compliance of construction work with the minimum standards of safety established by the State Building Code to ensure public health and safety for everyone. A...
data.boston.gov
Is subdivision a final step before beginning work?
It's not that I care about this building particularly, but between labor, cost of capital, cost of materials, vacancy rates (mostly class B and below, sure) it's surprising to see a large new office building go up. All signs point to yes, but could be a false start I guess. Hoping it's a bellwether for the city.