According to the
United States Census Bureau, the city has an area of 26.4 square miles (68.5 km), of which 25.1 square miles (65.1 km) is land and 1.3 square miles (3.4 km) (4.99%) is water.
Neighborhoods Golden Triangle The Golden Triangle was originally a three square mile district on the eastern side of Framingham, bordered by Worcester Rd. (Route 9), Cochituate Rd. (Route 30), and Speen Street in
Natick. In 1993, the area began to expand beyond the borders of the triangle with construction of a
BJ's Wholesale Club and a
Super Stop & Shop just north of Route 30. It now includes the original area plus parts of Old Connecticut Path., Concord St. (Route 126), and Speen St. north of Route 30. Because of the size and complexity of this area, Framingham and Natick cooperatively operate it as a single distinct district with similar
zoning. The area is one of the largest shopping districts in
New England. The area was formed with the construction of
Shoppers World in 1951. Shoppers' World was a large open air shopping mall, the second in the US and the first east of the
Mississippi River. The mall drew many other retail construction projects to the area, including
Marshalls (1961, rebuilt as
Bed Bath & Beyond 1997),
Caldor (1966, Rebuilt as
Wal-Mart in 2002),
Bradlees (1960s, rebuilt as
Kohl's in 2002), the Route 30 Mall (1970), an
AMC Framingham 15, the Framingham Mall (1978, rebuilt 2000), and
Lowe's (formerly the
Verizon Building, 2006). Complementary developments in Natick include the
Natick Mall (1966, rebuilt in 1991, expanded 2007 & renamed Natick Collection), Sherwood Plaza (1960), Cloverleaf Marketplace (1978), and the
Home Depot. In 1994, Shoppers' World was demolished and replaced with a strip mall named Shoppers World. There are also seven hotels and two car dealerships located within the Triangle. In addition to retail properties, there are large office developments in the area including several companies headquartered in the triangle; the world headquarters of
TJX is at the junction of Route 30 and Speen St, as is the main office of
IDG and
IDC. The
American Cancer Society has an office in Framingham. A
Carling Brewery began operations in 1956, ending in 1975. Their buildings later housed
Prime Computer and
Boston Scientific before demolition in 2018 for a new
MathWorks facility.
Sealtest had a manufacturing facility in Framingham which was used by
Breyers from 1964 to 2011
Downtown and South Framingham The downtown area is between Memorial Square, formed by the intersection of Concord St. and Union Ave., to the north, and its mirror intersection at the junction of Irving St. and Hollis St. on the south end. The area is bisected by Waverly St. (Route 135) and the
MBTA Commuter Rail tracks. The anchoring structure of Downtown is the city hall, The Memorial Building. From 2015 to 2016, the whole area underwent a multimillion-dollar reconstruction of the intersection of Union Ave. and Concord St. that replaced the
traffic circle with a signal-controlled intersection. Additional lights were installed at the Irving St./Hollis St. intersection, while older signals in the area were upgraded. All sidewalks in the area were to be replaced, lighting upgraded, and new amenities such as seating and bicycle racks were also installed. The project was scheduled to begin in 2012 but has been delayed to 2014–2015. Further delays pushed the project into 2015 due to needed electrical utility upgrades and replacement. South Framingham became the commercial center of the town with the advent of the railroad in the 1880s. It eventually came to house
Dennison Manufacturing and the former
General Motors Framingham Assembly plant, but the area underwent 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 starting in the early 2000s. Along with Brazilian and Spanish oriented retail shops, there are restaurants, legal and financial services, the city offices and library, police headquarters, a performing arts center, and the local branch of the
Social Security Administration. Several
Asian and
Indian stores and restaurants add to the rich ethnic flavor of the area, and many small businesses, restaurants and automotive-oriented shops line Waverly St. from Natick in east to Winter St. in the west. In 2006, the Fitts Market & Hemenway buildings façades underwent a restoration project; these newly renovated structures received a 2006 Massachusetts Historical Commission Preservation Award in the Restoration and Rehabilitation Category. In addition, several retail and housing projects involving the Arcade Building and the former Dennison Building Complex are in the planning stages or under construction.
West Framingham The business section on the West Side of Framingham runs primarily along Route 9, starting at Temple St., and is dominated by two large office/industrial parks: the Framingham Industrial Park on the north side of Route 9 and another park on the south side, both on the Framingham/Ashland/Southborough border.
Bose,
Staples and Applause have their world headquarters in these parks, as does convenience store chain
Cumberland Farms; in addition,
Netezza,
Genzyme,
Capital One,
CA Technologies,
ITT Tech and the local paper,
The MetroWest Daily News, all have major facilities there. Two of Framingham's seven major auto dealerships are also in West Framingham. The large tracts of multi-story apartment and
condominium complexes line both sides of Route 9 from Temple St. to the industrial parks. These buildings represent the majority of Framingham's multi-family dwellings, and along with the business complexes, helped create a large network of support services on the West Side: a supermarket, dozens of restaurants and pubs, hotels and a large
day-care facility all are in the two-mile (3 km) section of Route 9 from Temple St. to
Ashland.
Villages and Route 9 The
Framingham Centre Common Historic District is the city's physical and historic center. Formed at the junctions of
Worcester Rd. (Route 9), Pleasant St. (Route 30), High St., Main St. and Edgell Rd. the dominating presence is
Framingham State University. The school has several thousand students, about one third of whom live on campus. In the late 1960s,
MassHighway replaced the intersection with an overpass, depressing Route 9 below the local roads, and destroying the south half of the old Center retail district. The remaining half houses several small stores, restaurants,
realtors and legal offices. The old Boston and Worcester Street Railway depot, on the east side of the center, was converted into a strip mall in the early 1980s and houses the Center Postal Station (01703) and several small stores. The center is rounded out by One and Two Edgell Rd. (two small retail/office buildings), the historic
village hall, the Jonathan Maynard Building (a former school, now a part of the Framingham State University campus which houses the Danforth Art Museum ), the Framingham History Center (formerly the Framingham Historical Society and Museum), several banks, a Chinese restaurant, the
American Medical Response paramedic station and McCarthy Office Building. The village of Nobscot, at the intersection of Water St., Edmands Rd. and Edgell Rd. near
Nobscot Hill, and the Pinefield/Saxonville villages, located where Concord St., Water St., and Central St. intersect, are home to several small office buildings, strip malls and gas stations. in 2016, the town moved its satellite branch of the public library named for
Christa McAuliffe from Saxonville to a new facility across from the Hemenway School in Nobscot.
Saxonville is the home of the former Roxbury Carpet Company mill complex buildings (originally powered by the adjoining
Sudbury River), now an industrial park, and is one of the city's historical districts. ==Demographics==