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Feature Article

Best Places to Live 2009

By Katherine Bowers, Illustrations by Oliver Munday.

Page 3 of 10

PLACES THE PLUNGE FORGOT

Ten towns and neighborhoods where home prices are taking a pass on this whole meltdown thing.

    BEACON HILL
    Median condo price     $480,000
    One-year change    -3.90%
    Since market peak     +3.67%

Even in an abysmal market and at the going rate of $728 per square foot, condo sales in Beacon Hill rose 4.3 percent last year, notes Maryann Roos Hoskins of LandVest, who adds that while Back Bay prices surged 19 percent in 2008, they were inflated by the Mandarin Oriental's ultra-high-end condos. Despite tight competition among the city's three ritziest neighborhoods (the other being the South End), experts view Beacon Hill as leading the pack. And with the Liberty Hotel as a swanky new anchor and the rebirth of Cambridge Street as, finally, a tree-lined, strollable avenue, there's no bad side of the hill anymore.
    
    CAMBRIDGE

    Median home price    $750,000
    One-year change    +15.66%
    Since market peak    +12.36%
 
    Median condo price    $405,000
    One-year change    -0.55%
    Since market peak    -3.46%

Simple economics explains Cambridge's scorching single-family sales and cooler (yet still respectable) condo market. "It comes down to pent-up demand for the relatively limited supply of single-family homes," says Arthur Horiatis of Tory Row Real Estate. "We've had a lot more condos come on the market from new construction and conversions." East Cambridge, where a two-bedroom unit goes for roughly $350,000 to $450,000, has replaced Cambridge-port as the top destination for value-minded shoppers.

    HINGHAM
    Median home price    $632,500
    One-year change    +1.22%
    Since market peak    -4.89%

Developers keep loading up Hingham with swag—from golf courses to retail centers—as if it were some South Shore goodie bag. Hingham Shipyard is the latest, spruced up into an enclave of waterfront apartments, town-houses, and luxury condos. Hingham gains another mark in the plus column when Boston restaurant maven Esti Parsons (of Radius, Via Matta, and Great Bay fame) debuts an eponymous bistro, slated to open in late spring.

    JAMAICA PLAIN
    Median condo price    $329,500
    One-year change    -0.15%
    Since market peak    +2.97%

Gentrification may have stalled in Dorchester, but J.P.'s reinvention is the real deal. The restaurants are starting to rival the South End's, and the culture is as yeasty as Cambridge's. Most telling, people are staying put, sending the kids to the neighborhood Montessori, and planning out their next decade. Townhomes near Jamaica Pond can fetch north of $1 million; condos in triple-deckers off South and Washington streets offer first-time buyers deals in the $300,000s.

     LEXINGTON
    Median home price    $700,000
    One-year change    +1.23%
    Since market peak    -0.71%
 
In terms of housing options, Lexington's sheer variety of bungalows, elegant Victorians, and midcentury moderns—most within a 15-minute stroll of the bustling town center—is hard to top. The median price of a single-family residence here has barely budged from the 2005 high-water mark of $705,000. Those with a bit less cash to spend, however, would do well to look to the small houses on the Arlington line, which often list in the $500,000s.

    MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA
    Median home price    $762,500
    One-year change    +12.96%
    Since market peak    +11.15%

The town's 1990 decision to add the "by-the-Sea" suffix to set it apart from hoi polloi Manchesters elsewhere drew jibes. Now its recession-proof prices are giving M-B-T-S a less manufactured kind of status. The finite supply of century-old mansions overlooking the craggy coastline—evoking Newport at its most gilded—ensures the market's durability.

    ROCKPORT
    Median home price    $499,000
    One-year change    +4.94%
    Since market peak    +19.38%

Rockport masquerades as Sitka, Alaska, in the upcoming Sandra Bullock chick flick The Proposal. Despite the sensational setting on the tip of the Cape Ann peninsula, however, this community hasn't turned into a vapid tourist trap. Real-life amenities that include good bookstores, a working lobster fleet, commuter rail to Boston, and an above-average school system have kept values solid.

    WELLESLEY

    Median home price    $1.02 million
    One-year change    +5.37%
    Since market peak    +4.50%
 
Bragging rights are justifiably claimed by buyers who foresaw, pre-1995, the way Wellesley would morph into "Swellesley." Homes still move briskly, selling in an average of 107 days, only about two weeks longer than at the market peak, when it was 92 days. (By comparison, homes in equally tony Dover sit on the market 224 days, on average, up from 130 in 2005.) According to real estate agents, neighborhood living is in vogue in Wellesley, so houses in Westgate or Indian Cliffs Estates command heady prices.
 
    WESTON
    Median home price    $1.32 million
    One-year change    +7.55%
    Since market peak    +9.79%
 
There's an old adage about renovating to a neighborhood's base line before selling. In Weston, that would mean planting specimen trees and putting in a wine cellar. Builders have pulled back to let the market digest a surplus inventory of $2 million–plus properties, but competition for the "bargains" (anything under $900,000) remains fairly stiff.

    WINCHESTER
    Median home price    $722,500
    One-year change    +6.96%
    Since market peak    -1.77%

Plenty of Boston's captains of industry live in Winchester, and it's not hard to understand why. The commute's a dream, and the central, historic neighborhoods are as pretty as they were planned to be in the early 19th century. One slight hitch: A huge spike in popularity with young families has strained a school system that's seen only one property tax override since 1990.

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SOUTHBOROUGH,MA
Posted by Julianne | Mar. 2, 2009 at 9:49 AM
COMMENT:
I just wanted to let you know that i was very disappointed in this article as a proud home owner in Southborough, ma i believe we were the only town in the "red" on your map not to get a paragraph written about our town. Southborough continues to always be one of the highest end towns year after year in your annual real estate issue. Southborough generally is in the top 20 highest median priced home towns and in the top 10 highest income per household,yet THERE NEVER SEEMS TO BE ANY RECOGNITION FOR WHAT A SUPERIOR TOWN AND COMMUNITY SOUTHBOROUGH IS. Not to mention some of the finest public schools and two of the countries most elite private schools. It would be nice to not be thought of as some "hick" town out by worcester. MORE ARTICLES SHOULD BE WRITTEN ABOUT SOUTHBOROUGH.(instead of feeling like WHERE'S THAT)

Posted by Julianne | Mar. 2, 2009 at 9:49 AM
COMMENT:
Easton,ma
Posted by Anonymous | Mar. 3, 2009 at 7:35 PM
COMMENT:
Thank you for including Easton,ma in your list of Best places to live 2009. I grew up in West Roxbury,which is also on the list this year. These places are great communities with the only difference being that I now enjoy that colonial on 2 acres instead of a 5000sf lot. Easton was also #48 on Money magazine's 2007 best towns to live in.
PERFECT
Posted by natalie54 | Apr. 28, 2009 at 3:22 PM
COMMENT:
This list is spot on. Not so sure about Southborough though. I was a Southborough resident for 6 years and I now live in Hingham. Trust me, there is a major difference. You know your stuff Katherine. Thanks!
Melrose Value Indeed
Posted by Anonymous | May. 5, 2009 at 9:07 AM
COMMENT:
I have to give credit to the Boston Magazine for its view of Melrose in this issue and in past years. In 2002 I analyzed several towns for price/value and chose a beautiful Victorian as my residence. Years later I still believe I made the right decision. Having grown up in Winchester, I found Melrose to be the only close runner up in comparison for a town like atmosphere with quality community and well built homes. Overall, Melrose is known to be more of a secret gem. Once discovered I have been amazed by how much people really love it. From sophistication to conviniences, Melrose truelly is unique and more than deserves this recognition. In years to come its appeal will probably become more known for its quality of life.
Southborough
Posted by Anonymous | Jul. 16, 2009 at 7:14 AM
COMMENT:
I live in Hopkinton, but use to live in Soutborough. I think Southborough is a great town but the reason it has become less attractive to young home buyers is because the downtown area has little to offer. I think the young residents should form a downtown revitalization committee like Hopkiton has and take matters into your own hands! Breathe some new life into this fabulous town and put it back on the map!!

Posted by L | Aug. 19, 2009 at 6:32 AM
COMMENT:
Hingham
Posted by anonymous | Aug. 19, 2009 at 6:35 AM
COMMENT:
I lived in Hingham for 30 years. It education is adequate and the social structure is challenging for the most part for youbg children. It is a community which does not embrace difference or tolerance. Families mistreat neighbors and schools ignore bullying.
Hingham
Posted by D.G. | Sep. 11, 2009 at 5:54 PM
COMMENT:
Its true, Hingham is extremely racist. Brutal place to raise a child.
RE: Hingham
Posted by Anonymous | Sep. 23, 2009 at 9:40 AM
COMMENT:
"it education"? Haha. Hingham is NOT a brutal place to raise a child or any more racist than ANY OTHER place in the northeast. Let's face it...whitebread towns are a little racist. Hingham's a beautiful town, with a ton to offer. Want racism? Go down south.
Most racists don't know they are
Posted by Anonymous | Sep. 23, 2009 at 1:29 PM
COMMENT:
I'm lived in the South for several decades, where it is commonplace to have all kinds of different races, religions, and sexual orientations within a single town or even a neighborhood within a town. In contrast, everyone here knows what towns have what "kinds" of people in Boston. I'm continually amazed at how racially segregated most parts of Boston Metro are, and moreover, how so many Bostonians view ourselves (yes I'm permanently here) as open-minded and liberal. I guess it dates back to the blinders Boston operated with during the cod trade, which was, by the way, a completely racist-driven enterprise to feed slaves ...

Posted by | Oct. 26, 2009 at 8:55 PM
COMMENT:
Southborough, MA
Posted by Anonymous | Nov. 18, 2009 at 8:00 AM
COMMENT:
Hey where is that i heave never heard of that place before, Utica should be on there before southborough.
Southborough, MA
Posted by Anonymous | Nov. 18, 2009 at 8:00 AM
COMMENT:
Hey where is that i heave never heard of that place before, Utica should be on there before southborough.
Miss Southborough
Posted by Anonymous | Dec. 21, 2009 at 1:09 PM
COMMENT:
Lady, Please -- Stop your whining. Southborough isn't the only town that didn't make the list. Geesh.
Georgetown
Posted by Anonymous | Dec. 26, 2009 at 5:31 PM
COMMENT:
This town is one of the most racist towns in the U.S. The police sits at an angle to see if people of color are passing by to pull them over- day or night. It is amazing how a typical "local" belief is that the South,and not Boston/Metro, is racist. When I visit other areas, I am constantly trying to defend this place. My only excuse is that there are a few decent open-minded white people in Massachusetts. It seems that everyone thinks that Massachusetts is a terrible place for a person of color to live.
Georgetown, Ma
Posted by Anonymous | Dec. 26, 2009 at 5:45 PM
COMMENT:
Georgetown, who? Georgetown,SOUTH AFRICA--during the sixties?
Georgetown, MA
Posted by Anonymous | Dec. 26, 2009 at 6:45 PM
COMMENT:
I have to agree with the remarks about Georgetown being a racist town..at least the police display this. I see alot of people of color on the side of the road with the "blues" flashing. It's a shame that we are living in modern times, and the police are still in the 1800's abusing their authoritative positions as men of law. Yes, there are a few open-minded white people living in Massachusetts. Hoping all their minds will open soon!
Yes Julianne, Southborough is Great, but Grow Up Already...
Posted by Anonymous | Dec. 31, 2009 at 3:41 PM
COMMENT:
As someone who lives near Southborough, I agree that it is a pretty nice town. I am posting this comment only to assure other readers that NOT everyone in Southborough is a snobby, shallow, vacuous, status-seeking idiot like Julianne. I known several people there who seem to care about things that actually matter, instead of pathetically worrying if others view theirs as a "hick town out by Worcester". GOOD GRIEF!
hingham
Posted by Anonymous | Feb. 6, 2010 at 9:49 AM
COMMENT:
Its actually pretty sad, my dad went too look at houses in southborough and was treated like crap, likely because he is dark skinned. Little did they know we don't fit their stereotypical black person image....the jerk could have made decent commission
Dover
Posted by Anonymous | Feb. 18, 2010 at 7:28 AM
COMMENT:
Dover-Sherborn is actually rated 2nd in Massachusetts, and 6th in the North East. Its a great place to grow up, and it has a great education. (39% of kids that attended these shcools went to IV leuge.) Amazing, huh? Southborough, however has been known for racism, and you know it, so stop denying it!!!!!!! Rock on Dover!!

Posted by Anonymous | Mar. 8, 2010 at 1:32 PM
COMMENT:

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