Skip to main content
Start of main content

Union Square

A plan that will drive business and economy without driving out the residents

  • 4M

    Square Feet

  • 117

    Acres

  • Somerville, Massachusetts

    Somerville, Massachusetts

Strengthening a community in Boston's Union Square

A new light rail station will tie a long-neglected Union Square to downtown Boston. Low rents drew artists and immigrants for years, but with the promise of transit, rents are soaring. We’re laying the groundwork for Union Square 2.0 with a plan that balances substantial new development, protects current residents, and preserves the grit and funk that mark the square today. A plan that taps the economic value created by transit to broaden affordable options for living and working. Low-income households, artists, immigrants, and young entrepreneurs won’t have to move out—and new ones can move in.

Redevelopment with community in mind isn’t just designing beautiful buildings and public spaces. It’s creating programs to help immigrants start new restaurants, preserving treasured performance spaces, and supporting startups. Our plan uses mixed-income housing to make current residents can stay in the square. It adds mixed-use buildings to generate the activity that supports new and existing businesses. And it puts local artists in charge of street furniture, public art, and signage. That will help make sure the flavor of Union Square remains as distinct as its signature maple-bacon doughnuts.

It also means thinking about resources in creative ways. Those street-side restaurants and stores throw-off waste heat that can help keep upstairs apartments and offices warm in the fall and winter. That same heat can boost rooftop farms that serve ground-floor restaurants, cool buildings in summer, and catch rainwater to run washing machines or a street-level fountain.

We don’t just aim to make a great place to live and work, we aimed to build a new model for how urban communities can develop without losing their roots.

At a Glance

Offices
Client
  • City of Somerville

Back to the roots

Our Urban Places group walked the streets of Union Square to learn about the culture, the needs, the wants, and the passions of its people.

Meet Our Team

David Dixon, Vice President, Urban Places Fellow

We help communities manage change to become more livable, equitable, and resilient.

Elias Rashmawi, Vice President, Commercial and Industrial Land Development Sector Leader (North America)

Brownfields embody our community’s history and future. I translate my vision for what they can be into value for clients and communities.
Elias Rashmawi Vice President, Commercial and Industrial Land Development Sector Leader (North America) Read More

Chuck Lounsberry, Senior Principal, Visualization Technology Leader

Through design visualization, we’re helping people tell stories of their project from their perspective to their community.
Chuck Lounsberry Senior Principal, Visualization Technology Leader Read More

David Dixon

Vice President, Urban Places Fellow

Elias Rashmawi

Vice President, Commercial and Industrial Land Development Sector Leader (North America)

Chuck Lounsberry

Senior Principal, Visualization Technology Leader

We’re better together

  • Become a client

    Partner with us today to change how tomorrow looks. You’re exactly what’s needed to help us make it happen in your community.

  • Design your career

    Work with passionate people who are experts in their field. Our teams love what they do and are driven by how their work makes an impact on the communities they serve.

End of main content
To top