3 Massachusetts gateway cities driving the residential construction boom near Boston
Massachusetts has a housing problem — and the construction industry is finally starting to catch up. While Greater Boston grabs most of the headlines, three cities just outside its center are quietly becoming some of the most active residential construction markets in the region: Lawrence, Revere, and Worcester.
If you're a general contractor or developer working within an hour of Boston, these three markets are worth your full attention right now.
The numbers behind the boom
Between 2023 and 2024, Massachusetts Gateway Cities — 26 mid-size cities scattered across the state — added roughly 12,000 residential addresses combined. That's a sharp contrast from just two years earlier, when these same cities produced around 1,800 new units in 2022.
According to MassINC's 2025 Gateway Cities Housing Monitor, production surged fourfold in 2023 alone, with over 7,300 new units delivered across all Gateway Cities that year. And multifamily is driving the wave:
80% of new production in Gateway Cities is multifamily, not single-family.
Within that group, Lawrence, Revere, and Worcester stood out from the pack. Each added more than 1,000 net new units between 2022 and 2024 — more than any other Gateway City in the state.
The demand pressure behind this isn't complicated. MassINC estimates Gateway Cities alone would need to add 83,000 units to bring the regional housing market into balance. The state's housing secretary has put the statewide target at 222,000 homes. Developers who understand that gap are moving.
Revere: The biggest project in Greater Boston's history
Revere is no longer just a beach town with affordable rents. It's the site of Suffolk Downs, a 161-acre redevelopment that will eventually deliver 10,000 units of housing — making it the single largest approved residential development in the region's history.
For general contractors and framing subcontractors, this is one of the more active pipelines within a 15-minute drive of downtown Boston.
Lawrence: Fast growth, suburban spillover
Lawrence is growing quickly, and so is its surrounding area. Adjusted for population size, the suburbs around Lawrence and Methuen ranked among the fastest-growing in the state between 2022 and 2024, according to MassINC data.
The city itself has been adding units steadily, driven by a combination of new multifamily construction and a reduction in long-vacant properties coming back online. Lawrence has also made measurable progress in reducing high-poverty neighborhoods — a signal that residential investment is translating into broader neighborhood stabilization.

On the regulatory side, Gateway Cities across the state — Lawrence included — have been actively lowering barriers to development. Between 2024 and 2025, several cities reduced parking minimums, created new by-right multifamily zoning districts, and began offering tax abatements.
For developers eyeing the Merrimack Valley corridor, Lawrence's trajectory is hard to ignore. And for general contractors already working in the area, the pipeline of framing and siding work is building.
Worcester: A growing pipeline
Worcester is Massachusetts' second-largest city and, right now, one of its most active residential construction markets. As of early 2025, the Worcester Regional Chamber of Commerce tracked over 3,900 new housing units in the City's approval pipeline.
Residential vacancy rates in Worcester remain below the 5% threshold generally considered necessary to stabilize a housing market — meaning the city needs more, not less, construction activity.

What this means for general contractors and developers
Lawrence, Revere, and Worcester are leading indicators of where Massachusetts residential construction is heading — and all three are within the one-hour radius where Lifetime Contractors operates.
The projects driving this boom aren't small renovation jobs. They're 50-unit, 100-unit, 200-unit multifamily buildings that require coordinated trades working on tight schedules. In that environment, the biggest variable isn't materials or permits — it's having a crew that shows up, executes, and doesn't disappear mid-project.
That's where a subcontractor who handles framing, siding, roofing, and decking under one roof makes a measurable difference. When you're managing a 150-unit building with a developer breathing down your neck on schedule, coordinating three or four separate trade companies for the building envelope isn't a headache you want. It's a liability.
Building in this markets? Let's talk.
Lifetime Contractors works on residential and multifamily projects throughout Massachusetts. We handle wood framing, siding, roofing, and decking as a single integrated crew — so your building envelope gets closed faster, without the coordination problems that come from juggling multiple subs.
If you're managing a project in Revere, Lawrence, Worcester, or anywhere in between, we'd like to hear about it. Give us a call or reach out online. Let's build together.










