Originally built as a high school in 1899 and subsequently expanded twice in the early 20th-century, the Everett Street building has been vacant since 2015.įunding for the project includes $3.8 million from the Massachusetts Department of Housing and Community Development and an additional $4 million from the City of Boston Mayor’s Office of Housing. It is touted as the first residential facility of its kind in New England. Dubbed the Pryde, the 74-unit complex is a project headed by developer Pennrose and local nonprofit LGBTQ Senior Housing, Inc. Work is now officially underway on the conversion of an erstwhile middle school in Boston’s Hyde Park neighborhood into an LGBTQ-friendly affordable housing development for senior residents. New England’s first affordable housing development for LGBTQ+ seniors breaks ground in Boston
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