Stanley Martin Homes LLC has secured permits for 14 new residential units across two Greenville locations, combining for more than $2.8 million in construction value. The permits, all issued between May 19 and May 21, 2026, mark a concentrated push by the regional builder into the city's infill corridors.
The largest single permit, valued at $2,143,632, covers an eight-unit building at 0 Westfield Street tied to the Gibbs Street corridor. According to permit comments, the project encompasses lots 9 through 16 at addresses including 144A Gibbs Street, 144B Gibbs Street, and 140B Gibbs Street. The building will include sprinkler and electrical rooms serving the entire structure. The city classified the permit as commercial building construction for a new five-or-more-family residential project, and it was issued on May 19.
A day later and into May 21, Stanley Martin pulled six individual residential building permits for new townhomes on Broad River Street, at addresses 3, 5, 7, 9, and 11 Broad River Street, covering lots 1 through 5. Each townhome carries a permit valuation of $109,591, bringing the Broad River Street cluster to $657,546 in total. The permits were issued on May 20 and May 21. Stanley Martin Homes LLC is listed as both owner and contractor on every filing.
Combined, the seven permits total $2,801,178 and account for 14 new housing units. The Westfield Street project alone represents more than 76 percent of that dollar figure, reflecting the scale difference between the multifamily building and the individual townhome lots on Broad River Street.
Stanley Martin Homes, headquartered in the Mid-Atlantic region, has been expanding its footprint in the Southeast. The simultaneous permitting of projects on two separate streets within the same week suggests the builder is executing a coordinated development strategy rather than pursuing one-off opportunities.
The back-to-back filings matter because they show a national-scale homebuilder committing meaningful capital to Greenville's urban core at a time when infill housing supply remains a closely watched metric for the city's growth trajectory.