The Green at 9 and 90 is moving faster than a standard renovation. Between January 5 and April 2, 2026, a staggering 65 distinct permit filings landed on the books for the property at 1610 Worcester Rd, turning this South Framingham site into the city's most active construction zone in a single quarter.
This unprecedented volume of paperwork signals a complex, multi-phase redevelopment rather than a simple repair job. For neighbors along this busy arterial, the rapid succession of filings suggests a major overhaul of the commercial corridor that will likely alter traffic patterns and neighborhood character in the coming months.
The activity began in earnest on January 5, when Paul Campbell submitted the initial building permit application. The pace accelerated quickly. By February 1, Angelo Vigliotta had taken over as the primary applicant, driving a relentless wave of approvals through early March. The data reveals a compressed timeline: three separate electrical permits were issued on March 8 alone, following a cluster of filings in late February.
Records show Vigliotta filed multiple building permits (BLDE) on February 2, February 11, and February 25. Each document represents a distinct phase of construction, from foundational work to systems installation, all compressed into a single quarter. This pattern mirrors other high-velocity developments in the area, such as the initial building permit application filed in early January that set the stage for this explosion of activity.
Situating 65 permits at a single address is highly unusual for Framingham. While major projects typically span years, this site absorbed more than two months of municipal review time in just 88 days. Located at 1610 Worcester Rd in the 01702 ZIP code, the property sits on a major commuter route, meaning any expansion or structural change will directly impact local infrastructure and daily traffic flow.
The early February filings by Vigliotta indicate the project has moved beyond planning and into active execution. With the last recorded filing on April 2, the city now faces the challenge of monitoring concurrent construction phases to ensure safety codes are met. Residents can track the project's progress and review specific filings by visiting the Framingham city portal.