At the corner of Worcester Road and Route 9, the rhythm of construction has not slowed; it has accelerated. Over the last two months alone, a fresh batch of 36 municipal filings has been recorded for the high-rise complex known as The Green at 9 and 90, adding to a relentless wave of paperwork that now exceeds 100 distinct permits since the start of 2026.

This latest cluster, filed between April 2 and June 9, 2026, confirms that the 1966-era structure is undergoing a coordinated, city-wide unprecedented retrofit rather than isolated repairs. For residents of South Framingham, the sheer volume of activity suggests a capital project valued in the millions, targeting the building's core electrical and structural systems.

The new permits continue a pattern established earlier this year, where Galaxy Electrical Contractors drove a surge of 53 filings in a single quarter. This consistency points to a systematic overhaul of the complex's internal utilities. The filings cover a specific six-week window, maintaining the high velocity seen in previous reports and indicating that the project is moving through critical phases of modernization.

While the exact scope of every document remains buried in municipal records, the density of activity at 1610 Worcester Rd (ZIP 01702) is unmatched by any other single address in Framingham. The 1966 high-rise, which has long defined the skyline near the commuter rail station, is now the epicenter of the city's most active construction zone.

As the project heads into the third quarter of 2026, observers should watch for a shift in permit types. If the current trajectory holds, the next wave of filings will likely signal the transition from internal system upgrades to exterior work or final inspections. The pace of 36 filings in 68 days suggests the overhaul will extend well beyond summer, reshaping the infrastructure of one of the city's oldest residential towers.