Demystifying and Decreasing Development Costs
Development Cost Research
With the support of MONUM Summer Fellows, the iLab sought to ground-truth what it costs to develop market-rate and affordable housing in Boston using real city data. We found that affordable housing consistently costs more to build across housing typologies, and does not capture the same economies of scale as the private market. Key driving differences include divergent incentive models, higher soft costs, and longer development periods. Through detailed data, statistical, and policy analyses and reports, this project has helped inform recent policy conversations with departmental Chiefs and additional iLab initiatives including offsite and modular construction methods on infill lots. The iLab will continue to use its findings from this research to keep having conversations with important stakeholders and test new innovative approaches to housing. See one of the project’s presentations for more detailed information on our findings.
Offsite Construction
Studying Options for Expanding Offsite Construction in the Region
In partnership with the City of Boston, Cambridge, Everett, and Newton, the Metropolitan Area Planning Council (MAPC) was awarded $3 million by the Biden-Harris Administration and U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development to examine best practices of modular and offsite construction and produce such a facility in the Greater Boston area. Read more about this endeavor on MAPC’s website. Read the press release.
Offsite Construction
In September 2024, the Housing Innovation Lab released a Request for Information (RFI) to learn what types of offsite construction methods hold the most promise in decreasing construction costs while delivering a high quality product. We received eleven responses to the RFI and are now in the process of creating a Request for Proposals (RFP) for a modular construction pilot program to take what we have learned from the RFI and put offsite construction methods to the test on City-owned land.