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Professional office space in Northborough is available now for your own business! This beautiful space comes with a decorated waiting area, bathroom and kitchen to make you look like the professional you are without the extra expense! Private office space of approx 300 sq ft is in the heart of the office for a quiet area to meet with your clients and conduct your business. Rent includes heat, electricity, internet, water and sewer. Professional meeting room is available also at a reduced rate for tenants. This space will be a great way to expand your business in 2017! Application required. First and last with TAW lease. Listed for $850/month.

Professional office space in Northborough is available now for your own business! This beautiful space comes with a decorated waiting area, bathroom and kitchen to make you look like the professional you are without the extra expense! Sun drenched front office space of approx 240 sq ft is right off the waiting area with a set of French doors. Rent includes heat, electricity, internet, water and sewer. Professional meeting room is available also at a reduced rate for tenants. This space will be a great way to expand your business in 2017! Application required. First and last with TAW lease. Listed for $850/month.

Greendale! This carefully remodeled condo shows beautifully combining original features with energy efficiency upgrades. Gorgeous hardwood floors flow throughout with stained wood trim and high ceilings. Open kitchen with stainless steel appliances and adorable updated pantry with recessed lighting. Large bedrooms with a double closet Master. Updated bathroom! Additional space can be finished in the walk up attic that is only for this unit! Gas heat! Updated Windows! Low condo fees! Minutes from major routes and walk to schools and shopping! Listed at just $119,999!

Just listed! 79 Sajda Drive, Unit 79 in Shrewsbury! This 3 bed, 2.5 bath townhouse is listed for $470k by Coldwell Banker.

Just sold! 8 Riley Road in Northborough! This 4 bed, 3.5 bath colonial sold for $513k by LAER Realty Partners.

Just listed! 146 Blair Drive in Holden! This 5 bed, 3 bath colonial is listed for $469,900 by Janice Mitchell.

Just listed! 1 Highland in Holden! This 4 bed, 2.5 bath colonial is listed for $499,900 by RE/MAX.

Just listed! 6 Grove Meadow Road in Shrewsbury! This 4 bed, 2.5 bath colonial is listed for $665k by EntryOnly.com.

Just listed! 126 Pleasant Street in Northborough! This 3 bed, 2.5 bath colonial is listed for $499,900 by RE/MAX.
You don’t need to be the host of an extreme home makeover show to build an amazing backyard. In fact, the transformative projects below are easy enough for even the klutziest home improvement newbie to complete.
Just don’t be shocked when the Johnsons appear at your door with hot dog buns in hand, begging to throw a cookout at your place.
When Cara Daniel of “The Project Addict” blog spied a neighbor’s unruly outdoor curtains, she hacked some for her porch that could withstand a gusty Tornado Alley afternoon without upending a glass of lemonade or ensnaring an unsuspecting guest.
She found the sweet spot by slipping conduit pipes through the curtain tabs up top and a hem at the bottom, and securing the pipes with wires (taut, but not too tight).
Daniel did all the hard work of dreaming up the curtains, so a DIY newbie can definitely recreate the project, which uses easy-to-find materials like washers and camping stakes.
Upkeep has been equally simple thanks to her sturdy choice of fabric. “The marine fabric is better than outdoor fabric that I bought,” says Daniel. The easy-to-wash choice has kept the curtains looking picturesque after five years of use.
#2 Shutter Privacy Fence:
No fence? No problem! Daune Pitman of the “Cottage in the Oaks” blog MacGyvered an attractive privacy feature from a friend’s pile of discarded shutters.
The $0 price wasn’t the only thing that made the material desirable for an outdoor nook’s privacy screen, though. “They were tall,” says Pitman, “could easily be attached to posts, had the vents — which allows air to flow through — and didn’t weigh too much.”
After nailing the shutters to four-by-fours cemented into the ground (an easy task with a store-bought bag of pre-mixed cement), the nook-facing side got a charming French-blue facelift and the back a coating of foliage-matching bark brown paint.
It’s a kind of self-explanatory project because all you need is:
What could be easier?
Suburbanite Monica Mangin of the site “East Coast Creative” jumped at the chance to rehab a client’s neglected urban patio.
The showstopper was a clever PVC pergola decked with industrial-style lights. She was inspired by traditional wood pergolas, but wanted an easier material.
“A lot of mason jar light fixtures were trending,” says Mangin.”I liked the look of that but wanted to turn it a little more industrial.”
PVC pipe — with rebar inside as an anchor — won out for its ease on the DIYer and wallet. Could it get any easier?
A simple coat of hammered metallic outdoor spray paint gave the pipe a pricier look, and industrial-strength zip ties kept the string of dimmable, Edison bulb-style lights in place.
Although the project doesn’t take much time or skill, Mangin recommends recruiting two friends to help. Have one hold each end of the pergola while the third secures the lights with zip ties. Overall, it’s a dinner party-friendly cinch that’s surpassed the one-year mark.
Topping the list of Sad Gardening Ironies is when the hose you’ve lugged out to help your landscaping stay lush mows over a bed of delicate flowers you just planted. Sigh.
Lynda Makara of the blog “Home of Happy Art” figured out a pretty and pragmatic solution using affordable solar lights.
The DIY part entailed trashing their original plastic stakes (they weren’t strong enough to hold a hose in place), hammering 24-inch pieces of rebar into the ground, and slipping a light over each piece.
Those sturdy posts could handle even the bulkiest hose, protecting Makara’s plantings during waterings then casting a lovely spotlight on them post-dusk.
“The rebar is maintenance free,” says Makara. “I have had to replace some of the batteries in the solar lights, but I think that’s pretty normal.”
It doesn’t get much easier than hammering a stake into the ground. Although Makara suggests straightening the rebar with a level, that’s about as technical as it gets to create a more functional, flowering garden.