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Overview

The Foreclosure Process
Foreclosure is the process
of retrieving the parcel to the owners if they have faults in the payments.
In the United States, there are types of foreclosure in most common law
states. The noteholder claims the title and possession of the property back
in full satisfaction of bill using this "Deed in substitute foreclosure" or
"strict foreclosure" usually in contract. The property is subject to bargain
by the county deputy officer or other officer in the court if the proceeding
foreclosure is perhaps called as "judicial foreclosure".
As of this past few months
Home sales were up again nationally, rising 3.6%. The latest sign that life
of some sort that it was the 3rd straight month-over-month increase may be
finally returning to a sector but dead a few months ago. prices just keep on
falling.
View Listings-->
About Framingham Foreclosure
Framingham is a town in Middlesex County, Massachusetts, United States of America. From the 2000 census, the population of 66,910, which means that the most populous city in New England. 2005 population estimate is 65,598. There have been many proposals to amend the city charter to make Framingham a city, but none of them succeeded.
Geography
Framingham is a town located in the eastern Massachusetts, 20 miles west of Boston, mid-way between Boston and Worcester. About 67,000 inhabitants, Framingham is the largest city of Massachusetts and the hub is the Metrowest area. It is bordered by Southborough and Marlborough on the west, Sherborn and Ashland on the south, east of the Natick, Wayland and Sudbury in the north-east of the north. Framingham is 197 miles from New York City.
City of Framingham is divided by Route 9, which passes through the east and west through the middle of the city. South Framingham includes Downtown Framingham (hereinafter referred to as the city government seat), and villages Coburnville, Lokerville and Salem End Road. North Framingham includes the village of Nobscot, Pinefield, Ridgefield and Saxonville plus Framingham Center (the physical center of town, featuring the town commons).
Housing
Framingham Massachusetts is one of the few cities that have fulfilled their legal requirement of 10% Affordable housing, Chapter 40B, which are mainly targeted at people's level of income is 70% of median income. In addition to its 40B Affordable component, Framingham has a high percentage of rental units, which are aimed at people in the 30% median income bracket. Framingham has a much higher percentage of renter households than any of the surrounding cities. Statewide, the median income of renter households, 47% of the median for the Homeowners and the Middlesex County it is slightly more than 50%. To this end, Framingham, the median renter income $ 33,626 is 45% of the median homeowner income $ 75,040.
Housing in South Framingham mainly single family houses small lots (less than half of Acre), multi-family homes or apartments. In addition, a large proportion of affordable housing is located in the city, south of Route 9th However, a large number of large, single family homes around Salem End Road West Side of South Framingham. This area is often overlooked because it is in South Framingham because the area is physically separated from most of the South Side due to a number of reservoirs and the Sudbury River. [Also, there are many large Victorian houses located along the shores of Learned and Gleason Ponds, and along Concord St. and Union Ave. near Downtown Framingham. In addition, the West Side of South Framingham along Route 9 has several large tracts of multi story apartment buildings, which form a major part of the city housing stock.
North Framingham was originally mostly farmland and gave the land as one large family of large residential lots (more than half of Acre), after World War II. Saxonville village on the east side of the old mill area, which consists of many Victorian homes, and this is a major expansion under way for more than six hundred new homes on the former gravel pit. Nobscot village on the west side, there are many homes that have been evaluated over the mean for housing prices in the region. Although there are several small apartment complexes on the North Side, most have been converted to condominiums. In 1950 and 1960, the village of Nobscot, Saxonville and Pinefield all had a large number of slab and raised ranch-style houses have been built by the campanelli Company. Their home is a classic cookie cutter style homes that feature the same general shape and floor plan, while the six or seven styles of houses, the vast majority of which are referred to campanelli "L" ranches because their floor recalls the letter "L". At the time of construction to be the epitome of many homes, it was considered that the U.S. dream of homeownership today, are more modest home.
Today, most of the land is developed in Framingham with the exception of some parcels in the northwest quadrant. This city has more people with wells and septic systems for a large amount of ledge, which prevents the majority of the land is developed.
Transportation
Framingham is located approximately between Worcester, the commercial center of Central Massachusetts, and Boston, New England and a leading port of the capital. The railway and highway facilities connect these major centers, and other communities in the Greater Boston Metropolitan Area.
Mass-transit
Rail
* Direct rail service to Boston, New York, and all other points on the Amtrak network is available in Framingham.
* MBTA commuter rail service is available in South Station and Back Bay Station, Boston via the MBTA Framingham-Worcester Commuter Rail Line which connects South Station in Boston and the Worcester station. BBS is a journey time of 42-45 minutes. Originally called Framingham Commuter Rail Line, it was the End of the line until rail traffic was extended to Worcester in 1996. The line also serves the communities in Newton, Wellesley, Natick, Ashland, Southborough, Westborough and Grafton.
* CSX provides freight rail service, and uses the auto transloading facility in Framingham.
Bus
* Ekspressbuss provides service to Boston and Logan Airport.
* Peter Pan bus lines provides service to Worcester and Boston.
* Big W Transportation provides service to Milford and Hopkinton.
* The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA), the RIDE, a paratransit service to elderly and disabled people.
* The MetroWest Regional Transit Authority (MWRTA) operates local bus service called LIFT (Local Inter-Framingham Transit), which provides service to other local routes connecting the various regions of the city and the fixed-route public bus lines servicing multiple communities in the MetroWest region, including the cities of Ashland, Holliston, Milford , Hopkinton, Natick and Marlborough. The MWRTA also services the Ashland, Framingham, Holliston, Hopkinton, Natick (hereinafter referred to as the Natick Neighborhood Bus), Wayland and Weston. Sudbury, Sherborn and Milford may also join.
Air
Boston's Logan International Airport is easily accessible from Framingham. MassPort down all public transport from the airport terminal, through the Framingham Logan Express bus service seven days a week. Bus terminal, and paid parking facility are located on the Shoppers' World Mall property off the Massachusetts turnpike Exit 13, between Route 9 and Route 30, East Road is the crossroads and the Burr Street connector.
Golden Triangle
The Golden Triangle was originally the three square mile area east of the Framingham, bordered by Worcester Rd. (Line 9), Cochituate Rd. (Route 30), and Speen Street Natick. In 1993, the area began to expand beyond the borders of the construction of a triangle, BJ's Wholesale Club and Super Stop & Shop just north of the 30th Route It includes the original area plus parts of Old Connecticut Path., Concord St. (route 126) and Speen St. north of Route 30th As the size and complexity of this area, cooperation in Framingham and Natick to one flight a separate district with similar zoning. The region is one of the largest shopping districts in New England.
This area has been set up with the construction of Shoppers World in 1951. Shoppers' World was a large open air shopping mall, the first and second in the United States east of the Mississippi River. This mall drew many other retail construction projects to the area, including Marshalls (1961, rebuilt as Bed, Bath and Beyond, 1997), Caldor (1966, rebuilt as Wal * Mart in 2002), Bradlees (1960 rebuilt as Kohls in 2002), Route 30 Mall (1970), the Framingham Mall (1978, restored in 2000) and Lowes (formally Verizon Building, 2006). Further developments include the Natick Mall Natick ( 1966, restored in 1991, expanded in 2007 and around Natick Collection), Sherwood Plaza (1960), Cloverleaf Marketplace (1978) and Home Depot. In 1994, Shoppers' World was demolished and replaced with a strip mall. Similarly, the seven hotels and two car dealerships, Framingham Nissan / Jeep and Herb Connolly Chevrolet, located in the triangle.
In addition to retail properties, there are large office developments, including a number of companies which took the position of the triangle, the world headquarters of TJX is located in the junction of Route 30 and Speen St, as it is the main location of IDG and IDC. Breyer, Leggatt McCall, American Heart Association and American Cancer Society, all funds in the region. Boston Scientific headquarters is located in Natick, that the old Carling Brewery building and former Prime Parkway complex. BJ's Wholesale Club headquarters is located in Sherwood Plaza behind by 9, on the south side of the triangle. Everyone is more than a dozen large office complexes located in and along the borders, triangle.
Downtown and South Framingham
The center is located in a region between the Y-shaped circle formed by the visibility of Concord St. and Union Ave. , Called Memorial Square, which lies to the north and its mirror intersection at the crossroads Irving St. and Hollis St. on the south end. The region is bisected by Waverly St. (route 135) and the MBTA Commuter Rail tracks. The anchoring structure of Downtown is the town hall, The Memorial Building.
South Framingham became a commercial center of the city of the Advent of the railroad 1880s. He eventually became a house Dennison Manufacturing in Framingham and the former General Motors assembly plant, but the area was under a financial downturn after the closure of these facilities during the late 1980s. An influx of Hispanic and Brazilian immigrants helped to revitalize the district beginning in early 2000. Together with the Brazilian and Spanish oriented retail shops, the restaurants, legal and financial services, city offices and library, art museum, police headquarters and the local branch of the Social Security Administration. Several Asian and Indian shops and restaurants to include the region's rich ethnic flavor, and many small businesses, restaurants and automotive-oriented shops line Waverly St. from Natick in east to Winter St. West.
In 2006, Fitts Market & Hemenway buildings faades out the restoration project, the newly renovated structure was a 2006 Massachusetts Historical Commission Preservation Award in Restoration and Rehabilitation Category. In addition, a number of retail and housing projects, Arcade Building and the former Dennison Building Complex are under construction or in planning stages.
Western Framingham
Business Division, west of the Framingham runs mainly along the Route 9 begins Temple St, which is dominated by two large Office / industrial parks: the Framingham Industrial Park on the north side of Route 9, Framingham Technology Park on the south side, so that the Ashland / Southborogh border. Bose and Staples both have their world headquarters in these parks, in addition, Genzyme, Capital One, Computer Associates, ITT Tech, and the local paper, Metrowest Daily News, all the major facilities are located there. Framingham's three of seven major car dealers are also located in West Framingham: Ford, Toyota / Scion
Large tracts of multi-story apartment and condominium complexes line both sides of Route 9 Temple St. to industrial zones. These buildings represent the majority of Framingham's multi-family residential and commercial complexes with, helped build a large network of support services on the west side: Framingham second Super Stop & Shop supermarket, dozens of restaurants and pubs, Sheraton and Marriott hotels and a great day for all health care facility are the two mile part of Route 9 from Temple St. to Ashland.
Villages and Route 9
Framingham Center is a natural and historic center of town. The junctions are formed Worcester Rd. (Line 9), Pleasant St. (Route 30), High St., Main St. and Edgell Rd. predominant presence of the Framingham State College. Large, but compact school is home to several thousand students, about one-third of who live on campus. In the late 1960 MassHighway replaced the grade crossing points with beetleback, destroying the south of the old Center retail district. The remaining half of the house a few small shops, restaurants, estate and legal offices. The old Boston and Worcester Street Railway depot to the east of the center was surrounded by a strip Mall in the early 1980s and houses the Center Postal Station (01704) and some small shops. The center is rounded out by one and two Edgell Rd. (two small retail / office buildings), the historic Village Hall, the Framingham Historical Society and Museum, a number of banks, the Brazilian Restaurant, American Medical Response Next station and McCarthy Office Building.
Nobscot water in the village of St intersection RD Edmands Rd and Edgell. And Pinefield / Saxonville village, located where Concord St., Water St. and Central St. intersect, is home to several small office buildings, strip malls and gas stations. Saxonville home is the former Roxbury Carpet Company buildings, now the industrial park.
In addition, as part of Route 9 from Route 126 overpass is the Main St. / Edgell Rd. beetleback in Framingham Center is heavily developed. Two car dealerships, Herb Connolly Acura Framingham Nissan and several strip malls of various sizes, many small apartment complexes, several small office complexes and other small shops and restaurants make Route 9 the main commercial thoroughfare Framingham.
Finally, there are several other small retail areas and the distribution of resources throughout the city, such as near Mt Wayte Ave and Franklin St.; visibility Concord St. and Hartford St. and along School St., near Hamilton St.
Points of interest
Framingham features dozens of Athletic Fields and civic facilities spread throughout the city schools and public parks. Many of these recreational facilities built by the Civilian Conservation Corps during the New Deal.
Parks
* Bowditch Field located in the European Union Avenue midway between Downtown and the Framingham Athletic Center is the primary means to the city. This house is a large multi-purpose football stadium that includes a standing area on both sides of the bleachers. In addition to the baseball field, Tennis courts, a track-and field practices in the field and the headquarters of the city Parks Department. Bowditch, with Butterworth and Winch Parks, if all built during the Great Depression of the 1930 WPA projects.
* Butterworth Park is located in a corner of Grant St and Arthur St., near the park occupies a square block. The park is also a baseball stadium, which includes the standing on one side of the field, bleachers and a basketball court tennis court. There is street parking available on three sides.
* Winch Park is the sister park next to Butterworth and is located in Saxonville, a Framingham High School. It includes a baseball stadium, which contains the bleachers on one side of the field, the standing basketball court, tennis courts and two large practice fields used for football, soccer and lacrosse. There are two additional multi-use areas located on opposite sides of a large school building in High School.
* Callahan State Park is a large state park run by the DCR is located in the northwest corner of the city of Framingham is.
* Cochituate State Park on Lake Cochituate has a small part of the Framingham Saxonville Beach is located in north western shore of the lake.
* Danforth Danforth Street Park is located, not far from the Wayland town line. A small park has a playground, a half basketball court and a small baseball / kickball field.
* Framingham Common Framingham Center is located in front of the old city hall next to Edgell Rd and Vernon St. It features the town Christmas tree and outdoor stage used for concerts and other fair weather events. This is a favorite of the Framingham State College students and the site of its annual graduation ceremonies.
* Cushing, south of the park is a passive recreation area. The Framingham Peace and 9 / 11 memorials in the park across the street with the Farm Pond Cushing Chapel. After WWII ended, the land use of the Cushing Veterans Hospital.
Conservation of land
* Framingham has about 400 acres of land, which is placed in public storage.
o WITTENBORG Woods is a city of 1,999 was donated by Harriet WITTENBORG. Properties were originally purchased by Henry Ford as the 1940s. Henry Ford owned all the land around the wayside Inn in nearby Sudbury, and Harriet (and her husband) had an interview with Mr. Ford to determine whether they would be good stewards country.
o Morency Woods is a parcel of land, which is physically located in Natick, MA on the Framingham border, but which belongs to the city Framingham. The wooded land is used as a sewer bed until mid-1940 and was placed on the protection of 2001.
* The Sudbury Valley Trustees is approximately 200 acres of land in North Framingham and along the Sudbury River was the protection of confidence.
Leisure
* Woods Garden is managed by the New England Wildflower Society is a botanical garden that features the largest collection of native wildflowers landscape in New England. It is located in Nobscot, off of Hemenway Road.
* Framingham Country Club, located along the south side of Salem End Road, is a private club, an 18-hole course features 6,580 yards of golf from the longest par Tees for 72nd
* Millwood Farms Golf Course off Millwood Street is a public 14-hole, par 53 golf course. Initially, 9-hole course, it was extended to 14 holes at the end of 1970. Attempts to buy land in the full 18-hole, were successful.
* Nobscot Mountain Reservation is a private facility owned by the Knox Trail Council, Boy partiolaisia United States of America, and is open to the public in the majority of the year.
* The city has several public beaches including Saxonville beach on Lake Cochituate, Washakum Beach and the beach is on Lake Washakum Learned Pond.
* The former Cushing hospital grounds serve as walking, biking, rollerblading and picnic areas.
* Farm Pond, located in South Framingham, where the host used for July Fourth fireworks, now serves as a picnic area.
* Edward F. Loring Skating Arena, which is located near Farm Pond at the corner of Fountain and Dudley Roads area is a municipal skating arena lease with a group basis, and public skating and stick time is available September through April.
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