Best Places to Live 2012

Our annual guide to finding your happy place.

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Best Places to Live Scituate

Photograph by Tim Rice

Somerville

Because it’s the new Cambridge
Median condo price: $358,000, One-year change: +2%
Consider it the feistier younger sister to the People’s Republic: close to Boston and densely populated, but edgier and more artsy than its sibling. While the ’Ville’s Open Studios draw culture-seeking crowds from all over in the spring, you’ll find exhibits throughout the year. There are the studios in the Arts at the Armory and Brickbottom buildings, and the shows at the Washington Street Art Center. The Artisan’s Asylum craft center, with its classes on metalworking, home brewing, and, uh, robot building has grown so popular it had to be moved to a bigger space near Union Square — which, generally speaking, is where creative types hang their hats. That’s no surprise, given the neighborhood’s coffee shops, music venues, and the locavore-leaning Sherman Market. You’ll also find plenty of artistic folk in the ungentrified outpost of East Somerville (near Sullivan Square) and in pockets between Highland Avenue and Winter Hill. On the whole, prices are on the upswing in the city, but Ellen Friedman of Keller Williams Realty says there’s plenty in the $300,000 range, making Somerville a good option for first-time buyers — who will stand to profit if and when the city’s many planned municipal projects begin to bear fruit. In addition to the proposed Green Line extension, which would add five T stops, city planners have offered a fresh retail vision for Assembly Square, where new residences are already going up. And Alderman Tony Lafuente has plans to invigorate Winter Hill’s tired but well-trod commercial area.

 

Topsfield

Because the great outdoors are your backyard
Median home price: $415,700, One-year change: -4%
Most people know only one thing about Topsfield: the annual fall fair, which features piglet races and giant pumpkins. But this rural community of beautiful old homes and horse farms offers more than just a slice of Americana — it’s also a recreational hub for folks of all ages. Topsfield recently completed a two-mile rail trail that’s part of the proposed 28-mile Border to Boston Trail, which will eventually run from Peabody to Salisbury. Then there are the large swaths of Bradley Palmer State Park and the Ipswich Wildlife Sanctuary that fall within town lines. Baby boomers can park their bikes at the budding 55-plus English Commons community (customized town homes start around $650,000), which sits on 69 serene acres near the Putnamville Reservoir. But opportunities abound for buyers of all ages: Since 2006, prices here have plunged by 25 percent.

 

Westwood

Because it offers rural charm and big-city amenities
Median home price: $525,000, One-year change: -1%
If you want to leave the Back Bay for an idyllic suburb but are terrified of giving up your Apple store, consider Westwood. Retail addicts get their fix just across the town line at Dedham’s open-air Legacy Place, which includes Stellabella Toys, Whole Foods, Anthropologie, and more. Yet pretty Westwood (population under 15,000) retains its quaint character. And it’s getting some upgrades: a new library, new luxury senior housing, and a recently expanded middle school to accommodate a baby boomlet. Neighborhoods like Islington (prices start under $300,000) and the Clapboardtree Street area ($700,000 to $1.2 million) feature tasteful postwar housing stock, while Stevens Farm ($2 million and up)offers newer construction, says agent Barbara Shea. And with an Amtrak station and two commuter-rail stops, those who just can’t shake their downtown-shopping habit can get back in a flash.

 

Winthrop

Because your commute could be a 25-minute cruise
Median home price: $290,500, One-year change: -10%
When Winthrop began running a $6 weekday shuttle ferry to Rowes Wharf in downtown Boston last year, it opened up a world of possibilities for commuters in this ’burb northeast of the city (bonus points for free parking near the dock). But the ferry operated from just May to October, leaving residents out of luck during the winter. Thankfully, town manager James McKenna hopes to offer year-round service aboard a town-owned vessel in the near future. Winthrop has also secured state funding for a walkway and bike trail that will run along the harbor. Bargain Capes, ranches, and Victorians abound on this 1.6-square-mile peninsula, where the median price has dropped 20 percent since 2006 — and every house is near the water.

 

Wrentham

Because it’s the little town that could
Median home price: $390,000, One-year change: +13%
Many know Wrentham primarily for its outlets and proximity to Gillette Stadium. But its assets go far beyond Banana Republic and Tom Brady. For starters, there’s the top-notch extracurriculars at King Philip Regional High School, which completed a reconstruction in 2007. The blockbuster music program brings home top awards. Last year, the football team made it to the state semifinals, and the girls’ softball squad won its second consecutive state championship. (Paul Schaefer, district director of finance and operations, credits the surge in talent to a bump in enrollment.) Home values are on the upswing, too: The median price jumped $45,000 from 2010 to 2011, and with the recent approval of the Fox Run subdivision (which will start in the high $400,000s), the trend is likely to continue.