The Boston Globe

UMass Lowell rolls out $800m expansion agenda

Housing, dorm included in plan

- By Chris Lisinski

Big plans are in motion at the University of Massachuse­tts Lowell.

The university will embark on a massive, nearly $800 million developmen­t campaign poised to bring hundreds of units of housing, hundreds of thousands of square feet of commercial space, and a new dormitory to the Mill City.

Taken together, officials view the Lowell Innovation Network Corridor project — which will be financed mostly by private developers — as one of the most substantia­l changes coming to the city in decades.

“This is the most important economic developmen­t in Lowell in more than 20 years,” UMass President Marty Meehan, a longtime Lowellian, told the News Service. “This will be the most significan­t commercial developmen­t on the banks of the Merrimack River since the mills.”

Campus officials have been rolling out highlights of the plans in recent days, and Governor Maura Healey is set to travel to Lowell on Thursday for an event with Meehan, UMass Lowell Chancellor Julie Chen, and other officials to announce “a major new milestone for a transforma­tive economic developmen­t project” in the city.

The project will unfold in three major phases. The first two phases will happen roughly simultaneo­usly, each adding mixed-use space. One will build out land next to the Tsongas Arena, and a counterpar­t will take aim a stone’s throw away near the Wannalanci­t Mills.

Chen said both locations will each add about 300,000-squarefoot buildings, about 20 percent of which UMass Lowell will occupy. Companies who want to be close to campus will lease the remaining space.

“We’re excited about that because that means those are prime companies to hire our students as paid interns as well as to hire them after they graduate,” she said in an interview.

More than half of the 17,000plus students at UMass Lowell are studying STEM fields, Chen said.

For both new mixed-use spaces, developers will build housing next door, geared toward recent graduates and young profession­als. That developmen­t will add nearly 500 total units of housing to Lowell’s stock.

Chen estimated groundbrea­king will begin next year, followed by about two years of constructi­on and then occupancy in 2027.

The project’s third phase, which does not have a clear timeline, envisions a new 461-bed dormitory near LeLacheur Park.

UMass Lowell is working with private developers GMH Communitie­s and Wexford on the project. Chen said the school, city, and state will collective­ly shoulder about 20 percent of the project cost, and the developers will cover the other 80 percent.

More than a dozen other colleges and universiti­es across the country have embarked on similar efforts with the developers, according to Chen, who said Lowell’s proximity to Interstate 495, comparably lower cost of living, and industrial roots provided an attractive option.

“We’re excited in terms of helping our students get paid internship­s, but also making sure that students, when they graduate, don’t feel like they have to leave the state,” Chen said. “They can find a place that’s affordable to live, they can have a great job. All that combinatio­n helps us to

‘This is the most important economic developmen­t in Lowell in more than 20 years.’ MARTY MEEHAN

UMass president

keep the 25- to 35-year-olds in Massachuse­tts so that they will stay and not feel like they have to go to some other state.”

“If they leave in that stage, then once they start having families, you’re not going to get them back,” she added. “We want to keep them here, and if you can keep that talent pool here, that’s how you keep the companies here.”

Housing and the labor pool are pressing issues where state policymake­rs regularly hear warnings about how difficult it is for Bay Staters to find an affordable place to live and the challenges employers face recruiting and retaining workers.

“This is a project that has unique housing, housing designed for young people, people that graduate from college, people who are early in their careers,” Meehan, who served in the US House of Representa­tives and led UMass Lowell before taking over the system, said. “It’s great for our housing shortage, but also, developmen­t partnershi­p with a university like UMass Lowell means these companies will be integrally involved with getting potential workers.”

Lowell is one of the state’s socalled Gateway Cities, a former textile hub that experience­d an economic downturn after industry dried up. The city of 113,000 had a median household income of about $72,000 in the latest US Census data, about three-quarters as much as the state as a whole.

Local leaders have been working to spur new developmen­t in Lowell, particular­ly by embracing startups and developing fields. Chen said she believes the campus developmen­t can “really expand and catalyze” efforts already underway, noting that small companies that graduate out of the “M2D2 medical device incubator space often struggle to find appropriat­e office locations.

“The same is true for a lot of the companies that we already work with,” she said. “When they think about locating in Lowell, we’ve got some beautiful mill buildings, right, but they’re not really the best thing necessaril­y for a tech company to move into. This [developmen­t] creates the right kind of buildings for a lot of those tech companies to move to.”

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