Poll

Boston Magazine

 

The Best Places to Live 2008

By Katherine Bowers

Page 2 of 8


New to the Market
You're looking to purchase your first home. You also want to make sure you're not going to get burned. Point your search to one of these spots, and know you'll be making a sound investment.


IF YOU ARE SINGLE AND...

You want in on gentrification

South Boston
Median condo price: $360,500
One-year change: +5 percent
Five-year change: +34 percent
Despite what looked like a possible oversupply of new construction and triple-decker conversions, condo prices in Southie have barely flinched in the current market downturn. The area's young, increasingly upscale population, along with a slow influx of trendier restaurants and retailers, points toward a bright future, and some of Boston's most ambitious developments in decades (the mixed-use Fan Pier project, to give one example) are finally getting under way on the neighborhood's long-underutilized waterfront.

You need peace and quiet

Ashland
Median home price: $368,950
One-year change: -8 percent
Five-year change: +10 percent
When it comes to nightlife, Ashland offers little more than cricket symphonies. What it does provide in abundance are small houses and fully loaded townhouses, priced in the $300,000s, that you can swing on a single income. There's also the promise of future gains: MetroWest has been home to a sales-appreciation gravy train in the past decade, and this town sits at the next stop.

IF YOU'RE STYARTING A FAMILY AND...

You value stroller room

Melrose
Median home price:
$405,000
One-year change: -4 percent
Five-year change: +18 percent
This burg has become a refuge for ex-city-dwelling new parents reluctant to give up sidewalk life. The Victorian downtown boasts day-to-day amenities (grocery, post office) as well as other essentials for unreformed urbanites (good restaurants, designer boutiques, the obligatory Starbucks), and more than a dozen playgrounds are scattered throughout the leafy neighborhoods. There's also a new middle school, and a skate park is in the works.

You like a Rockwellian vibe

Scituate
Median home price:
$482,200
One-year change: +2 percent
Five-year change: +24 percent
Part of the so-called Irish Riviera, this erstwhile fishing village has five town beaches, a bike path, and a rec department on overdrive that organizes everything from kids' cooking classes to a babysitter training course. Starter-home neighborhoods feature shingled bungalows topping out in the low $400,000s, and some solid elementary schools. The new Greenbush commuter rail line gives the town easy access to Boston, making it ripe for price gains.

You like nonstop activity

Hudson
Median home price:
$310,000
One-year change: -7 percent
Five-year change: +7 percent
The tech jobs that arrived when Intel established a campus here 10 years ago have transformed this once-sleepy mill town. Today young families are flocking to it, drawn in part by pristine single-family homes that can be had for under $400,000. Parents push strollers on a new bike path while kids jam on the just-opened downtown skate park; an adjacent splash pool debuts this spring.


IF YOU WANT TO BE GUARANTEED A QUICK RESALE AND...

You're handy with tools

West Concord
Median home price: $775,000 (Concord-wide)
One-year change: -5 percent
Five-year change: +24 percent
Industrious DIYers have been sprucing up the small Victorians and multifamily homes in what historically has been the more industrial part of town. That energy has perked up West Concord center, where the town's original five-and-dime now has company in a quilter's shop and a wine store.Yet another bonus is entrée to the well-regarded Concord-Carlisle school system.

You prefer an un-suburb

Waltham
Median home price:
$400,000
One-year change: -2 percent
Five-year change: +18 percent
Brandeis and Bentley give Waltham the steady supply of house hunters that is a college-town perk, not to mention racial diversity, lively nightlife, and an impressive crop of restaurants along Moody Street. Commuters benefit from quick access to I-95, Route 2, and two rail stops.

 

THE GAMBLE: Attleboro
After decades of manufacturing declines, this once-thriving industrial outpost is battling back. Its young, progressive, and openly gay mayor, Kevin Dumas, has opened a bike path, streamlined business-permitting processes, and inaugurated an industrial park. A downtown facelift is under way, and $14.5 million has been committed to the first phase of a $60 million residential complex built around a new bus-and-rail hub. If it also can continue to improve its schools, Attleboro may be poised for another heyday. (Median home price, $283,000; one-year change: -7 percent; five-year change: +20 percent)


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User comments

Attleboro's gamble
Feb. 26, 2008 at 12:05 PM
Posted by andrew dan
The downtown facelift is a big gamble, but whats a better story is the rebuilding of the school system. Beyond that it has its own Zoo, art museum, the best endowed community hospital in new england, an open government. All at a real discount on real estate and taxes.
Not a gamble I would take with kids
Feb. 26, 2008 at 7:05 PM
Posted by Anonymous
The Attleboro school system isn't good. There have been gang fights in the high school cafeteria and the school system has to focus it's resources on just maintaining discipline. Too close to the bad areas of Rhode Island, drug deals in the center, thugs hanging out there all hours. Not a place to raise kids.
6 Years and Counting....
Feb. 27, 2008 at 9:53 AM
Posted by J M D
Strongly disagree with Anonymous! Attleboro schools are getting a lot better and have some of the best programs in the state. I rarely hear of violence in and out of the school system. I feel very safe here. Also, Attleboro is 12 minutes from Providence which is architecturally beautiful and culture rich so I don't know why you are saying it is near the bad parts of Rhode Island. Lastly, Attleboro is a great place to raise children. My 2 nieces are thriving and a zoo up the street doesn't hurt either. Do some research and you will find that Attleboro is not what it used to be and that is a good thing!!!
Attleboro - a jewel waiting to be discovered
Feb. 27, 2008 at 1:08 PM
Posted by Frank Monti
My wife and I have lived her for 14 years since we relocated here because we wanted to live in an old Victorian home. I am now the President of the Attleboro Historic Preservation Society and we have never regretted our moving “out-of-state” from RI. My commute to work in Providence is 10 easy miles with no traffic. Our home is a showplace which would have cost 140% more in RI and would be taxed at 4 times what we are paying in Attleboro. Our neighbors are wonderful, culturally diverse. friendly people. The neighborhood is like the Beaver’s neighborhood on the TV show except with multiple ethnic backgrounds. There are plenty of housing bargains here which will prove to be good investments in the near future. One example is an old fire station in South Attleboro that is the process of being turned into two condominiums providing an outstanding example of the adaptive reuse of older properties. The city is over 300 years old and has the potential to become a historic preserva
Believe in Attleboro
Feb. 27, 2008 at 3:06 PM
Posted by P A
I strongly disagree with Anonymous. My family has lived in Attleboro since 1996 and both my kids attend Attleboro schools. We are very happy in the direction which the school system and the City is moving. My children and I feel very safe here and in their schools. Being so close to Providence RI and Pawtucket RI is great as both cities offer many great restaurants. We just need a few of those restaraunts in our Downtown area
Attleboro's rich community
Feb. 29, 2008 at 7:20 AM
Posted by Roy Belcher
Aside from burgeoning economic renewal, Attleboro offers a really vibrant community with many civic and social organizations, an active Chamber of Commerce, churches of many faiths, a great YMCA, senior center, quality child daycare facilities, etc. Now Britol Community College has located a permanent campus in Attleboro, opening up new educational opportunities. The future looks bright in Attleboro.
GLBT
Feb. 29, 2008 at 10:27 PM
Posted by Anonymous
Great place to raise GLBT family. Very open minded families and schools.
Hull a Gamble?
Mar. 5, 2008 at 6:25 AM
Posted by Anonymous
I disagree that Hull is a Gamble. It's a great small seaside community with a hotel, new condos, restaurants, great water views, a beautiful beach and easy access to the new train and the commuter boat. A lot of the homes have been renovated over the past few years so there are some beautiful homes to choice from. The view across the Hingha & Hull bay is the same view you get in Hingham with a price tag thats a lot less. The walk along the beach can not be found any where else on the south shore.
Correction to Article
Mar. 17, 2008 at 9:19 AM
Posted by Justin Manning
Our firm has conducted over 14,000 real estate auctions in MA and nationally since 1976. In a 1st mortgage foreclosure auction in MA, the buyer will be reponsible for the unpaid taxes, water & utilities (as seen on the Municipal Lien Certificate). However, as long as it's the 1st mortgage being foreclosed, the junior lien holders and junior mortgage holders get wiped out. This quote from the article is just incorrect: "Once you find a house you like, you'll need to make sure there are no liens against it—from the unpaid kitchen contractor, for instance—as those liabilities fall to the purchaser." The only time this would apply is if these liens were recorded and were senior to the mortgage being foreclosed. ie. 2nd or 3rd mortgage foreclosure. FYI...
foreclosures & liens
Apr. 21, 2008 at 1:36 PM
Posted by neil m
In MA all money owed to govt (so municipal taxes, waters, utilities) and any lien put on by the gov't (child support, income/irs tax liens) are superior to a mortgage. Also any condo fee complaint (lien) is superior to a mortgage. A Mortgagee can still foreclose with superior liens owed, but those liens will not be extinguished by the foreclosure, so subsequent owners are liable. Also, any lien that was put on record in the registry of deeds prior to when the mortgage that is being foreclosed was originally put on record WILL NOT be extinguished by the foreclosure. In almost all cases lenders will not give money unless all previous liens are payed off, so if you see a previous undischarged lien of record, the lien was probably settled but someone was to lazy to file the discharge. But in the rare case that lien was not discharged because it was not paid, the post-foreclosure owner will be liable.
foreclosures & liens
Apr. 21, 2008 at 2:03 PM
Posted by neil m
Also, liens have expiration times by statute. For example tax liens are good for ten years, attachments are good for 5 yrs 30 days, Blah blah. The point being is if you're interested in buying a foreclosed property at auction you should hire a real estate attorney (who will hire a title-examiner) PRIOR to auction in order to do your due-diligence & see what is owed. Also, the real estate law firms that handle lenders' foreclosures at auction represent lenders & not the foreclosure buyer. If you are financing your purchase you'll have your own bank's attorney verifying the title & whats owed, but if you're buying in cash (or have some non-traditional financing) you really need to hire someone that knows what their doing & will be liable if their examination of the title is incorrect & there's a lot more owed on the property than you thought.
Great Community, Good Schools, gang fights are false.
May. 3, 2008 at 11:18 PM
Posted by Joseph Lazzerini
Hello: Anonymous: As a High School student at Attleboro and a candidate for Attleboro City Council At-Large in 2009. I have to strongly disagree with your commments. That fight, which I was a witness to: was not gang related. One member was suggested by the administation that he may have been in a gang which later turned out that he was not. The School system is very good. We have great administrators and hearfelt teachers that really care about the success of the students. So take this from someone who knows first hand. Attleboro is a great place to live. We are all a family here in Attleboro and we are all friends. Its how this parents raise the kids' that makes the difference. You can live in the best place in the world, like the nearby town of Rehoboth but if teens want to do drugs they will find a way. The new superintendent has revamped the school system over the last two years and major changes have been put into effect. So take a new look at Attleboro. We are a thriving town an

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