Everett Triangle's approved, under construction, and recently completed project pipeline represents a housing increase from 2020 to 2030 that can house 10,000+ more residents. If proposals consistent with zoning move at the same speed as Greystar's developments, it could be as much as 15,000+ more residents here by 2030. It's an unusually fast pace for housing generation in a Greater Boston community--even Seaport, Fenway, and Assembly Row haven't brought this many units online this quickly."New small town" is right. That's, what, 1,500 units underway? 2,000 to 2,500 when you add in the Vero and Pioneer? Translates to 3,000-4,000 humans, depending on the unit mixes in each building and how many units are rented by couples?
Everett Triangle's approved, under construction, and recently completed project pipeline represents a housing increase from 2020 to 2030 that can house 10,000+ more residents. If proposals consistent with zoning move at the same speed as Greystar's developments, it could be as much as 15,000+ more residents here by 2030. It's an unusually fast pace for housing generation in a Greater Boston community--even Seaport, Fenway, and Assembly Row haven't brought this many units online this quickly.
Comedy writer George Meyer once said he loved to see advertisements with a lie to word ratio approaching 1. An example is “Country Crock,” which is not from the country and has never been near a crock. I submit “The Mason,” a project so named even though anybody with any masonry skills would ever be allowed on site.