National homebuilder Stanley Martin Homes LLC has secured four residential building permits for new townhome construction along Broad River Street in Greenville, adding more than $438,000 in combined project value to the city's housing pipeline. The permits, all issued between May 13 and May 14, 2026, point to an active build phase in what appears to be a larger planned townhome community near the Broad River corridor.
What the Permits Show
The four units are clustered at consecutive addresses — 2, 4, 8, and 10 Broad River Street — and correspond to Lots 118, 119, 121, and 122. Each permit carries an identical valuation of $109,591, for a combined construction value of $438,364. Stanley Martin Homes is listed as both the property owner and the general contractor on all four filings.
Three of the permits — covering 2, 4, and 8 Broad River Street — were issued on May 13, while the fourth, at 10 Broad River Street, followed one day later on May 14. All four are classified as "Residential, New Townhouse" permits and carry an "Issued" status, meaning construction can proceed immediately.
Key Projects Driving the Numbers
Stanley Martin Homes, headquartered in the mid-Atlantic region, has been expanding its footprint across the Southeast. The lot numbering on the new permits — jumping from 118 to 122 — suggests additional units may already be planned or permitted along the same stretch, though only these four appear in the current batch of filings.
The Broad River Street location sits in the western portion of the city, an area that has drawn increasing residential development interest in recent years. Townhome construction in particular has become a growing share of Greenville's new housing permits as builders respond to demand for relatively affordable, attached-unit housing within the city limits.
What This Means for Greenville
The rapid-fire permitting of four units in a single week by a single national builder signals continued confidence in Greenville's for-sale residential market, and the sequential lot numbers hint that more activity on Broad River Street may follow.