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Chris Remmes

The 1,500-Unit Secret: Boston's Next Great Luxury Address

There is a real estate story unfolding in downtown Boston right now that most buyers — even sophisticated, high-net-worth buyers who follow this market closely — don't fully understand yet. And that gap between what's happening and what people know about it is, frankly, one of the more compelling buying opportunities we've seen in this city in years.

Over 1,500 luxury residential units are currently in various stages of permitting, construction, and delivery across downtown Boston — not in the Seaport, not in Back Bay, not in the South End, but in the Financial District, Downtown Crossing, and the surrounding streets that were, until recently, the exclusive domain of office workers, law firms, and financial institutions. These units are being carved out of the bones of Boston's old commercial stock: the glass-and-steel office towers that sat underutilized through the pandemic years and never fully recovered their pre-2020 occupancy levels.

Boston Luxury Condos: Which Buildings Have Appreciated the Most Over the Last Decade

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Boston's luxury condo market has delivered consistently strong returns over the past ten years, but appreciation has not been evenly distributed. Location, timing of development, and neighborhood trajectory have separated the top performers from the rest. Here is where the strongest gains have been concentrated — and the specific buildings that have led them.

Should You Sell Your Boston Luxury Home Off-Market? When Privacy Helps and When It Hurts

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For many owners of high-end property, the idea of an off-market luxury home sale in Boston is appealing. Privacy, discretion, fewer showings, and tighter control over exposure can all sound like advantages, especially for prominent sellers or owners of particularly distinctive homes.

But off-market strategy is often misunderstood.

At Remmes & Co., we view private sales as a tool, not a default. In the right situation, selling a luxury home off-market can make sense. In the wrong situation, it can quietly reduce competition, weaken pricing leverage, and leave money on the table.

 

That Property Video You Just Watched? It's Not Real Footage.

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Let that sink in for a moment.

The smooth, cinematic property walkthrough you just watched wasn't filmed by anyone. There was no steadicam operator gliding through hallways, no drone sweeping over the rooftop, and no hours spent in post-production stitching clips together.

It was built entirely from still photographs — taken at every angle of the property — and rendered into a seamless video by artificial intelligence.

And we're betting most of you couldn't tell the difference.

What Is Considered Luxury Boston Real Estate? A Deep Dive Into the Price Spectrum

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Boston is one of the most layered real estate markets in the country. What counts as "luxury" here depends not just on price, but on neighborhood, building type, amenities, and an intangible sense of prestige that shifts from block to block. Whether you are shopping at the $1 million entry point or targeting a $30 million penthouse, understanding the spectrum is the key to making a smart investment.

The Top 20 Luxury Condo Buildings in Boston: A Definitive Ranking

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Boston’s luxury condo landscape has been transformed over the past decade. Branded residences from the world’s most prestigious hospitality companies now share the skyline with homegrown towers from developers like Millennium Partners and Cottonwood Group. What follows is our definitive ranking of the twenty finest luxury condo buildings in the city, evaluated on location, architecture, amenities, finishes, brand prestige, and long-term value.

18 Harvard Street, Unit 3 — A Top-Floor Charlestown Condo Listed at $565,000

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Charlestown, Boston, MA 02129 | 1 Bed | 1 Bath | 560 Sq Ft | Listed 3/19/2026

A third-floor condominium at 18 Harvard Street in Charlestown has just hit the market at $565,000, offering a top-floor perch in one of Boston's most historic neighborhoods.

The Building

The brick building dates to 1899 according to public records and contains four units, all of which are owner-occupied. The roof was replaced in 2017. There is no elevator — buyers should be prepared to walk up to the third floor. Laundry facilities are located within the building.

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