Between January and March 2026, the high-rise complex known as The Green at 9 and 90 absorbed 69 separate permit filings, a rate of activity that dwarfs the typical baseline for residential properties in Framingham by a factor of nearly six. This surge of paperwork points to a comprehensive, system-wide renovation rather than isolated repairs, transforming the 58-year-old South Framingham landmark into a construction zone for the foreseeable future.
Residents and neighbors should expect significant construction noise and potential utility interruptions as the work progresses through the spring and summer. The sheer volume of filings indicates an extensive modernization effort at the 1610 Worcester Rd address, where the pace of change is unmatched by any other multi-family property in the city.
Applicant Angelo Vigliotta orchestrated the filing spree, with a notable cluster of electrical permits issued on February 11 and February 25, 2026. On February 11 alone, multiple electrical permits bearing the same applicant name were logged, followed by additional filings later that month and into March. These records confirm a coordinated strategy to upgrade the building's electrical infrastructure alongside broader construction needs, addressing the core systems of the massive structure.
Historical context reveals the sheer scale of the undertaking. The 293,180-square-foot structure, built in 1966, contains 402 bedrooms and 306 bathrooms. While Paul Campbell filed an initial building permit application on behalf of 1610 Worcester Road Owner, LLC in November 2025, the recent explosion of filings suggests that phase of planning has transitioned into active execution. This follows the initial analysis of the address cluster released in April, which first flagged the unusual activity.
This activity level is highly unusual for the South Framingham neighborhood, where single-family homes typically see one or two permits per year. The concentration of 69 filings in just 90 days at a single address mirrors patterns seen in other major commercial or multi-family rehabilitation projects. The specific focus on electrical work suggests the building is undergoing critical system replacements to meet current codes or improve energy efficiency across all 402 units.
Further details on specific electrical upgrades can be traced through individual filings on the city's public portal. As the project moves forward, city inspectors will likely increase site visits to ensure compliance with the dense filing schedule. Residents with questions can review the full record set at the Framingham city portal.