Twelve permits in 90 days is an anomaly for most homeowners, but 12 Parmenter Rd has become the epicenter of a much larger phenomenon. This single address in Framingham has generated 15 filings in three months, a volume 48.4 times the local baseline.

This surge at Parmenter Road is not an isolated incident. It anchors a citywide pattern where electrician Nathan Ashe has driven a rapid wave of residential electrical upgrades across multiple neighborhoods. Residents in West Framingham and along the Sudbury border should watch how this coordinated activity evolves.

The data reveals a concentrated effort centered on 12 Parmenter Rd. Records show two electrical permits filed there on March 5, 2026, both under the BLDE record type with status 1. These early filings launched a cascade of activity. Over the following weeks, Ashe submitted applications that tied this specific location to a broader network of projects. By late April, the count at this single property had climbed to 15 distinct filings.

The scope of Ashe's work extends far beyond one driveway. Reporting on this pattern indicates Ashe filed 18 electrical permits across 14 distinct addresses in just 45 days. Earlier tracking showed even higher numbers, with 22 permits spanning 18 homes over a seven-week span in early 2026. This volume of work covers ZIP codes 01701 and 01702, linking properties from the city center to its western edges. For a detailed look at how one applicant managed this volume, see the analysis on one electrician's rapid permit surge across the city.

This concentration of filings suggests a systematic approach rather than random home improvements. The filings cluster heavily in early 2026, indicating a coordinated campaign likely tied to solar installations or major panel upgrades. The activity spans diverse neighborhoods, creating a visible thread of construction and electrical work connecting disparate parts of Framingham. Further reporting on Sunrun installer filings confirms the link between this applicant and a specific installer network.

Residents should monitor upcoming inspection schedules and completion dates for these properties. The high volume of filings means inspectors may face a backlog, potentially delaying final approvals for homeowners. If the pattern continues at this pace, additional filings could appear in the next quarter, further stretching local building department resources.