But the soccer club’s most-ardent fans aren’t too concerned.
“If we’re delayed for a little bit then there you go, that’s construction,” said Ervin Vargas, president of Defiance 1636, the official supporters group for Rhode Island Football Club. “We support the team. We trust them. We expect to play at home.”
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Once the $130 million, 10,000-seat stadium finally opens in Pawtucket, he told the Globe, “the community is going to thrive having this here, and we’re excited for it.”
The Rhode Island FC has been playing its home games at a 5,252-capacity Beirne Stadium at Bryant University in Smithfield. The team had an average attendance of about 4,250 people at their 16 matches at home this season, according to data Rhode Island FC shared with the Globe, selling out three games including the one against rivals Hartford Athletic.
In its report, JLL, the construction management firm that is monitoring the Tidewater Landing stadium project, cited financing delays as one of the main reasons for the later completion date, which was first reported by WPRI. The stadium has raised eyebrows for being one of the most expensive projects for a minor league team.The city of Pawtucket, the state of Rhode Island, and developer Fortuitous Partners are financing the building of the stadium, and the private developer will eventually take possession of it.
A spokesperson for Pawtucket Mayor Donald Grebien said he expects the team’s home opener to be played in Pawtucket. And stadium developer Fortuitous Partners is confident that next year the club will play all of 17 its home games there next year.
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“Outside of any catastrophic, unforeseen, event that is outside anybody’s control, this stadium, for all functional purposes, will be complete and will be occupied and we’ll be playing soccer games, soccer matches, in April,” Mike Raia, a spokesperson for Fortuitous, told the Globe.
Representatives for Rosemawr Management, which bought bonds that were part of the financing structure for the project, and Stifel Financial Corp., an underwriter of the bonds, said they were aware of the construction delay and were confident that the developer would complete the project by Spring 2025.
Earlier this month, season ticket memberships for the Rhode Island FC’s 2025 season went on sale in four premium seating tiers ranging from “Riverside Field” seats ($90 per game, $1,620 for the season) to “Platinum Club” seats ($200 per game, $3,600 for the season). General seating pricing ranges from $16.36-$44 per game.
Matthew Touchette, a spokesperson for the state’s economic development agency, Rhode Island Commerce, said the developer would be responsible for any associated cost overruns that may emerge due to the delay, which Raia confirmed.
Meanwhile, Governor Dan McKee told the Globe he was excited about the prospect of seeing the team host their matches in their new home at last.
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“We are very confident that’s gonna open there. Our Rhode Island Football Club is having a good year, by the way,” he said, alluding to the team potentially making the playoffs with two matches remaining in the season.
“We are looking forward to that stadium opening up in time to make sure that their home games next year will be in Pawtucket.”
Christopher Gavin of the Globe Staff contributed to this report.
Omar Mohammed can be reached at omar.mohammed@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter (X) @shurufu.
Nationally, over half, or 54.5 percent of home listings in November, lingered on the market for at least 60 days, up from 49.9 percent from the same time last year, Redfin reported. The total was the highest for any November since 2019.
Milwaukee, Wis., followed Providence at 38.8 percent, with Montgomery County, Penn., in third at 41.4 percent, according to the report released Monday.
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Miami saw the highest percentage of “stale” listings, with 63.8 percent remaining on the market after 60 days, followed by Austin, Texas, and Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
The only New England city besides Providence included in the top 50 most populated metropolitan areas is Boston, which saw a rate of 44.2 percent.
“A lot of listings on the market are either stale or uninhabitable,” Meme Loggins, a Redfin real estate agent in Oregon, said in the report. “There’s a lot of inventory, but it doesn’t feel like enough.”
So what’s different about Providence?
There are a number of factors in play, including demand for rental properties, according to Alysandra Nemeth, a local Redfin real estate agent.
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Nemeth told the Globe on Friday several multifamily homes she sold in the last few months moved quickly.
“If you have a multifamily [listing] that comes up and you’ve got an investor or someone that’s looking to owner-occupy a property and rent some out … it’s the perfect scenario because there’s no shortage of people that are looking to rent within the area,” Nemeth said.
Nemeth thinks the lack of inventory in the Rhode Island market is also keeping listings fresh.
Data released by the Rhode Island Association of Realtors in December showed there was a less than two months worth of supply of single-family homes across the state — well below the six-month supply level considered indicative of a healthy real estate market.
Driven, in part, by the competition for properties, the median statewide home price soared more than 11 percent year over year to $480,000, according to the association.
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“It just continues to be a battle where, you know, if a good home comes on the market and it’s priced right, it’s probably going to go quicker, and entertain more offers than some other areas,” Nemeth said.
Providence’s location is also desirable for buyers, Nemeth said. There’s easy access to Boston and New York City, all with a considerably lower price point than those metro areas, Nemeth said.
And Providence has plenty of appeal of its own, too.
“There’s just a lot of, like, great culinary experiences in Providence — like the food here is amazing,” Nemeth said. “So that also goes hand in hand with it. There’s a lot going on. This city is probably like the next city to watch out for.”
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Christopher Gavin can be reached at christopher.gavin@globe.com.
Here are the biggest businessnews stories to watch in Rhode Island in 2026.
1. Will Hasbro leave Rhode Island for Boston?
Hasbro Inc. has been teasing Rhode Island’s leaders in mulling a move to Boston, and officials are tossing out all sorts of ideas — tax credits, an annual “Rhode Island Hasbro Day,” special access to airport lounges, subsidies for on-site child care — to see what might keep the century-old toy company anchored in its home state.
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State leaders pitched Hasbro earlier this winter on six potential locations in three cities where Hasbro could relocate. But in that same meeting, leaders from Rhode Island Commerce and Governor Dan McKee’s office also pitched a series of incentives for the maker of Monopoly, My Little Pony, and Nerf, according to a report and videos released to the Globe on Monday in response to a public records request.
Hasbro spokespeople maintain that they have “no updates” on any potential relocation, but CEO Chris Cocks told employees in late 2024 that they would hear from the company’s leadership team sometime in the first quarter of 2025 about whether they’d be heading for greener pastures beyond Rhode Island.
Antonio Afonso, McKee’s chief of staff and the state’s “point person” on Hasbro, declined to be interviewed.
2. The company buying up Newport restaurants
In Newport, there’s one man who seems to be everywhere: Nicholas S. Schorsch.
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A wealthy entrepreneur and investor, Schorsch has been on roll with his Heritage Restaurant Group since relocating to Newport from New York City 12 years ago, and has amassed a growing portfolio.
In 2024 alone, the group acquired restaurants Caleb & Broad, Flo’s Clam Shack, The Reef, The Red Parrot, The Brick Alley Pub, and many more. In late December, the group also announced it would acquire the historic Vanderbilt hotel, a Georgian Revival mansion. It’s not yet clear what the Heritage group paid for the hotel, but the transaction is expected to close in early 2025.
The group also operates Newport Craft Brewing, La Forge Casino Restaurant, La Costa Lobster Rolls and Tacos, Cluck Truck, Cluck House, A Mano Pizza & Gelato, Wiener Wagon, and Wally’s Wieners. It also owns Newport Lobster Company, one of the largest seafood wholesalers in the area, and runs concessions at Easton’s Beach.
Many of the restaurants Schorsch has acquired were family-run operations where the owners were nearing retirement age. His purchase, some say, was a lifeline so they could step away from their businesses. But critics are concerned about the powerhouse the group is becoming, saying that much control over businesses on Aquidneck Island could raise prices and stifle competition.
3. The expansion of Brown University Health
Rhode Island’s largest health care system,Brown University Health, previously known as Lifespan Corp., acquired St. Anne’s Hospital in Fall River and Morton Hospital in Taunton from bankrupt Steward Health Care for $175 million in 2024. This year, the hospital owner plans to expand in Foxborough, Mass., by bolstering two outpatient clinics it purchased from Steward that could generate $43 million annually by fiscal year 2027. The clinics could be an opportunity, officials told investors in December, to expand cancer care and ambulatory surgery into Massachusetts. They also plan to broaden their specialty physician groups.
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4. Continued fallout from the Washington Bridge closure
The Washington Bridge westbound on Interstate 195 abruptly closed more than a year ago, leaving drivers scrambling, and a long list of questions about went went wrong. The bridge — meant to last at least two more decades — needs to be demolished and rebuilt. Demolition is expected to take another year, and there is no timeline currently for when a new span will be completed. Chicago-based Walsh Construction Company will compete with a joint venture of American Bridge Company from Pennsylvania and New York-based MLJ Contracting Corp. to build the new bridge.
The state has sued 13 companies who were previously hired by the state to inspect the bridge, or do construction or design work. Several defendants have already pushed back on the suit, calling it a political “blame game.” A judge is expected to consider their motions to dismiss the lawsuit this month.
5. More shakeups at the state Housing Department
On New Year’s Eve, Tara Booker, the executive director of homelessness response for the R.I. Department of Housing, submitted her resignation. In a phone conversation with the Globe, Booker declined to comment as to why she would leave, and said she would remain at her post “through at least Jan. 31, and potentially longer.”
“I have a transition plan,” said Booker. “I don’t really want to comment on anything right now. I’m still working and want a productive transition.”
Booker also declined to comment on any winter shelter plans, which is a program she has overseen at the department since she was hired in March 2024. She is one of several of the department’s high-ranking leaders who have given their notice in the last year. Over the summer, former secretary Stefan I. Pryor resigned. Under his leadership, the department faced internal struggles and incomplete projects, and was circumventing procurement rules that may have cost taxpayers tens of thousands of dollars, the Globe reported. In November, after less than a year on the job, deputy housing secretary Deborah Flannery resigned.
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Leaders in the General Assembly, including Senate President Dominick Ruggerio, said they have been “disappointed” in the department’s former leadership. In late November, agency consultant Deborah Goddard was appointed by Governor Dan McKee as the department’s fourth housing secretary since it was created in 2022. Her appointment will need the Senate’s approval.
Like her predecessors, Goddard will face a housing crisis that has been worsening for more than 30 years, developers who may want to build affordable housing but are facing red tape, and inflation.
6. A funding request from the ‘Superman’ building developer
It’s been two years since the state unveiled plans to redevelop the long-vacant “Superman” building in downtown Providence ― the tallest building in the state ― into apartments with room for commercial space. It was seen as a major win for the McKee administration, but not much has been done since. When asked if the idea of redeveloping 111 Westminster St. from office space into 285 residential units was dead, Senate President Dominick Ruggerio said, “They’re hanging on by their fingernails.”
“They want money,” Ruggerio told the Globe. “The problem is, they never told us how much.”
In August, Providence Mayor Brett Smiley told the Globe that the owner of the Industrial National Bank Building is asking for more than $10 million in additional support to convert the 26-story skyscraper into apartments, but wouldn’t say exactly how much.
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Alexa Gagosz can be reached at alexa.gagosz@globe.com. Follow her @alexagagosz and on Instagram @AlexaGagosz.