Archive for March 2025
Boston warns of email scam targeting real estate developers
At least one recipient has fallen victim to the scheme, according to a city official. Read More
Read MoreNatick Mall owner buys more time on $505M loan
Brookfield Properties has contended with the loss of multiple major tenants in Natick in recent years, including Lord & Taylor, Neiman Marcus, Sears and Wegmans. Read More
Read MoreHere’s the South Coast Rail schedule; service set to begin
The MBTA has released the train schedule for the new Fall River/New Bedford line, with a total of 32 trains leaving either city each weekday. Read More
Read MoreAI boom drives data center development in unexpected markets
The race for power is reshaping the data-center landscape. Read More
Read MoreFormer Stop & Shop president, mother of Mass. treasurer, dies at 93
Carol Rabb Goldberg, the mother of state Treasurer Deborah Goldberg and former president of the Stop & Shop supermarket chain, died Monday evening. Read More
Read MoreFive things: Tariff troubles, life sciences hiring, building sales, and your go-to sign of spring
Here are today’s five things you need to know, including tariff troubles, life sciences hiring, building sales, and your go-to sign of spring. Read More
Read MoreReport sheds light on cannabis trends, and more than $8B in sales
More than six years in, the legal cannabis industry landscape in Massachusetts has had a chance to evolve, and a new industry report examines some of the trendlines. Read More
Read MoreNew research challenges notion that AI will reduce employee work hours
In a surprising twist, artificial-intelligence adoption may actually lead to less work-life balance for employees across various industries. Read More
Read MoreFeds look at selling JFK, O’Neill, other Mass. buildings
The Trump administration has published a list of hundreds of federally owned properties nationwide that it views as “non-core.” It includes nine Massachusetts properties, a number that could grow. Read More
Read MoreTwo towers, with 750 apartments, proposed on Morrissey Blvd.
A city-approved master plan had called for one of the two buildings to be life sciences labs, but the development team is pivoting. Read More
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