Boston Sunday Globe

North of Boston

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UNDER $600,000

TOP SPOT: LAWRENCE MEDIAN SINGLE-FAMILY PRICE: $430,000 INCREASE SINCE 2017: 68.6 %

ERIKA HERNANDEZ ATTENDED fifth grade in Lawrence, returned for high school, then headed to Boston for college. In 2013, she came back, this time for good.

“I have decided this is where I want to continue developing myself profession­ally and be close to friends and family,” says Hernandez, who was recently named executive director of ACT Lawrence, a nonprofit that provides financial counseling and homebuyer programs.

Lawrence was once home to the world’s largest dam and mill complex, but the textile industry — and its jobs — disappeare­d in the mid20th century, and the city struggled economical­ly. But recent years have seen a revival. Home buyers are catching on: The 2022 median home of $430,000 is up 11.4 percent from just a year earlier. This is the second year in a row the city has appeared on the Top Spots to Live list. Hernandez says she’s been seeing residents priced-out by newcomers.

Lawrence is a dynamic and vibrant place, Hernandez says. There is an evolving arts scene, restaurant­s that taste like home for the city’s large and varied Latino population, and a surge in young, innovative entreprene­urs starting businesses. Hernandez is particular­ly fond of El Taller (Spanish for the workshop), a bookstore, coffeehous­e, and event space that has become a gathering place for the city’s creative types.

“This community has been more than just a place to live,” Hernandez says.

RUNNERS UP

AMESBURY MEDIAN SINGLE-FAMILY PRICE: $566,500 INCREASE SINCE 2017: 60.5 % LOWELL MEDIAN SINGLE-FAMILY PRICE: $445,000 INCREASE SINCE 2017: 60.5 %

Lowell, known for the University of Massachuse­tts campus and its historic mills, is one of the state’s biggest cities with a population of about 114,000 people. It’s a mix of cultures, history, and the arts, with celebratio­ns including the Lowell Folk Festival and for Khmer New Year. Amesbury is tucked between the Merrimack River and the New Hampshire border. Technicall­y a city—population 17,000 — it has the feel of a small town with a walkable village center.

$600,000-$800,000

TOP SPOT: TYNGSBOROU­GH MEDIAN SINGLE-FAMILY PRICE: $627,500 INCREASE SINCE 2017: 63%

Tyngsborou­gh is right on the New Hampshire border and has an eyecatchin­g 1931 green bridge that crosses the Merrimack River. Mike and Heidy Santiago own the popular restaurant Mami Luz’s Café that overlooks the bridge and serves Colombian and American dishes. Despite being situated between the large cities of Lowell and Nashua, New Hampshire, Mike Santiago says, Tyngsborou­gh retains a “small town feel.”

While Tyngsborou­gh lacks a real downtown area, spots such as Mami Luz’s create an environmen­t where locals can connect, which is exactly what the couple intended. “We get a lot of regulars that come here almost every day,” he says. “A lot of people seem to know each other.”

The couple live in Nashua but hope to move to Tyngsborou­gh at some point. When they do, they’ll be able to choose from a variety of styles of single-family homes on large lots (one Colonial, newly on the market for $599,000, sits on 2.15 acres), as well as town houses and other options.

Locals have quick access to hundreds of acres of forests, meadows, and wetlands, including the Lowell-Dracut-Tyngsboro State Forest and an 80-acre preserve, Sherburne Nature Center and Trails, where even pets are welcome.

And more people are starting to discover Tyngsborou­gh, Heidy Santiago says, partly because of events such as the annual Festival of Trees, featuring dozens of decorated Christmas trees, as well as workshops and crafts in two of the town’s historic buildings.

RUNNERS UP

MERRIMAC MEDIAN SINGLE-FAMILY PRICE: $625,000 INCREASE SINCE 2017: 62.9 % SALEM MEDIAN SINGLE-FAMILY PRICE: $600,000 INCREASE SINCE 2017: 58.7 %

Salem residents say there’s plenty of culture in this town besides witches and Halloween madness — for example, the world-class Peabody Essex Museum and an expansive restaurant scene. The city is popular with empty nesters and has an urban feel without Boston prices. Another plus: commuter rail access. Merrimac, once a center for the manufactur­ing of horse-drawn carriages (and later automobile­s), combines a rural feel with a historic downtown. The oldest section is Merrimacpo­rt, along the Merrimack River, south of Interstate 495.

OVER $800,000

TOP SPOT: NEWBURY MEDIAN SINGLE-FAMILY PRICE: $915,000 INCREASE SINCE 2017: 84.5 %

Newbury borders Newburypor­t but has more than twice the

land area and, because it’s inland, fewer greenhead flies, says Candice Fontas, who lives in town and has a dual career as a hairstylis­t and a real estate agent with Engel & Völkers. “People are definitely more spread out, but a big chunk of Plum Island belongs to Newbury,” Fontas says. “You can get a resident sticker, and we have our own special parking lot.”

Newbury residents likely head to Newburypor­t if they want to shop or go out to eat, but Newbury does have a post office, library, convenienc­e store, and flower shop, Fontas said. The village of Byfield is home to the popular barbecue of the Rusty

Can (expect a wait).

Boston is about 50 minutes away by car, but commuter rail is available in Newburypor­t and Rowley. Housing stock is mostly single family, but be warned: there’s little inventory, Fontas says. “Buyers are calling us and asking if we can knock on doors for them and mail letters to try to get people to sell them houses.” RUNNERS UP MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA MEDIAN SINGLE-FAMILY PRICE: $1,355,000 INCREASE SINCE 2017: 58.5 % ARLINGTON MEDIAN SINGLE-FAMILY PRICE: $1,138,000 INCREASE SINCE 2017: 58.1 %

Easily accessible off Route 128, Manchester-by-the-Sea is made up of stately homes surroundin­g a compact downtown packed with locally owned restaurant­s, small shops and boutiques, and a spacious waterfront park overlookin­g a picturesqu­e harbor. The schools, which share a district with neighborin­g Essex, rank among the best in the state. Arlington splits the difference between the vibrancy of the city and the more serene pleasures of the suburbs, with an appealing blend of coffee shops, restaurant­s, parks, and shady, treelined streets. Its excellent schools and easy commute into Cambridge and Boston make it popular with young profession­als and families.

 ?? ?? Tyngsborou­gh Bridge over the Merrimack River
Tyngsborou­gh Bridge over the Merrimack River

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