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Spring brings new momentum — and new questions — for Massachusetts housing industry - by David O’Sullivan

David O’Sullivan

As we move into the spring everyone’s mood seems to improve. The familiar signs of spring return, longer days, renewed construction activity, and cautious optimism. We push thoughts of snow and cold away and think of the awakening of the flowers and new leaves on the trees. But what do people in the housing industry dream of for spring besides good weather?

This year feels different. Beneath the seasonal rhythm lies a deeper transition point for housing in Massachusetts, one that is reshaping how we think about design, development, and delivery.

From my vantage point as an architect working across the region, the story of this spring is not simply about restarting projects, it’s about rethinking how to address the growing housing shortage in Massachusetts.

In the Greater Boston area, the answer is simple, new momentum. After a prolonged period of uncertainty, stalled projects, and reimagining, this spring carries with it a cautious but tangible sense of forward movement. For those of us in the design and development world, the season represents more than a change in weather, it signals the potential easing of a housing pipeline that has been on hold.

Over the past year, rising interest rates, escalating construction costs, and financing challenges forced many projects to the sidelines. Developments that once seemed certain were paused, redesigned, or shelved altogether. From an architect’s perspective, this slowdown created frustration and sometimes new action by looking at how the project could move forward. We explored options for efficiency and costs and looked at revisions to make the project viable. And now, as conditions begin to stabilize, some of those projects are quietly returning to life only to be questionable again over the last couple of weeks with war in the Middle East. People are asking, what will happen to the economy now?

Massachusetts continues to advance policies aimed at addressing housing shortages, including zoning reforms and transit-oriented development initiatives. These efforts are beginning to influence real decisions on density, land use, and project feasibility. But policy alone does not create housing. 

Architects are increasingly tasked with translating regulatory frameworks into places people want to live. That means balancing density with livability, integrating new development into existing neighborhoods, and designing buildings that feel both contemporary and contextual. 

This spring, a shift is emerging in the types of housing being proposed for projects, more efficient unit layouts that prioritize function without sacrificing comfort, flexible spaces that accommodate remote work and evolving household structures and new housing types which had not been looked at recently. Duplexes, triplexes, and small multifamily buildings with designs that emphasize efficiency, walkability, shared outdoor space, and community connection are again being considered. The focus is moving beyond volume alone toward quality and adaptability.

Despite signs of progress, the economic realities of building have not disappeared. Construction costs remain high, and uncertainty still shapes decision-making. As a result, architects are playing a more strategic role earlier in the process by working alongside developers and contractors to identify cost-effective systems, streamline building forms, and make smarter material choices. The goal is not just to design well, but to design wisely.

One of the clearest lessons from the past year is that no single task can solve the housing crisis, success increasingly depends on collaboration between public officials, private developers, design teams, and communities.

Projects that are moving forward today tend to share a common trait, alignment with all parties involved. When expectations, constraints, and goals are addressed early and openly, the path to construction becomes far more achievable.

This spring does not mark a return to the rapid, pre-pandemic pace of development. Instead, it represents a more thoughtful and deliberate phase where one where lessons learned are shaping better outcomes. There is also a renewed sense of purpose.

For architects, this moment is an opportunity to lead and to bring creativity, discipline, and collaboration to the forefront of the housing conversation. As the season unfolds, the industry’s collective hope is that this renewed energy will translate into real progress on the ground.

In the end, what we are all hoping for this spring isn’t just good weather, it’s the chance to build again.

David O’Sullivan, AIA, is the president of O’Sullivan Architects, Inc., Reading, Mass.

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