The 1966 high-rise complex known as The Green at 9 and 90 has become the epicenter of a sudden construction surge, with 71 permit applications landing on the city's desk in just 67 days. This isn't the slow drip of routine maintenance; it is a coordinated, aggressive overhaul of one of South Framingham's largest residential sites.
Between January 2 and March 10, 2026, the pace of filings accelerated rapidly, signaling that the 293,180-square-foot property at 1610 Worcester Rd is undergoing a fundamental transformation. With 402 bedrooms and 306 bathrooms, the scale of this work suggests a comprehensive update to aging building systems that could alter the daily experience for hundreds of residents.
The data reveals a distinct ramp-up in activity. Angelo Vigliotta initiated a steady stream of submissions in mid-January, but the frequency spiked in February and March. On February 11, three separate building permit records were logged. By February 25, three more followed. The intensity peaked on March 8, a single day that saw three electrical permits filed simultaneously, including BLDE-26-305, BLDE-26-301, and BLDE-26-298.
While the specific descriptions for many of these filings remain classified as "unknown" in the public record, the pattern is clear. Earlier documents, such as building permit BLDE-26-259, explicitly referenced the apartment high-rise nature of the site. The current batch of permits, all marked with status "2," indicates they are actively moving through the city's review process. This activity coincides with recent market movements at the complex, including a unit sale in March 2025, suggesting the owner, 1610 Worcester Road Owner, LLC, is positioning the property for a new phase of occupancy.
Neighbors should expect increased construction traffic and potential utility interruptions as these electrical and building permits advance. The City of Framingham is transitioning its records to the OpenGov platform, which will change how future filings are tracked starting July 1, 2025. For now, residents can monitor the active status of these projects directly through the city's portal to track progress and potential disruptions.