Anson Experience vibrant suburban living in one of our brand-new, spacious, well-appointed one, two,... An unmatched Medford location.

A luxury studio, one, two, or three bedroom residence. Lifestyle-centric community amenities. This is what Arcadia at Rivers Edge has in store for you when you lease one of our upscale apartment homes. Bringing you so much more than just a home, Arcadia at Rivers Edge delivers an authentic, close-to-the-city living destination in an incredibly rare setting. Our high-end community sits just a few m

iles north of downtown Boston, in Medford, Massachusetts, putting you only steps from The River’s Edge Park and the picturesque Malden River.

Thank you for everyone's contribution!!
09/01/2023

Thank you for everyone's contribution!!

07/05/2023
Would like to take this opportunity to thank all resident at Anson for their pledges to make our planet a better place.G...
04/27/2023

Would like to take this opportunity to thank all resident at Anson for their pledges to make our planet a better place.

Go Team Anson!!

Save our planet by planting seeds
04/26/2023

Save our planet by planting seeds

Did you know? The fashion industry produces 150 billion garments a year and 87% (40 million tons) end up in a landfill w...
04/24/2023

Did you know? The fashion industry produces 150 billion garments a year and 87% (40 million tons) end up in a landfill where they smolder and pollute the air or an incinerator.
Only 1% of all discarded clothing is actually recycled.
The average person today buys 60 percent more items of clothing than they did 15 years ago, but keep them for only half as long. The average garment may be worn as few as ten times before disposal.
The apparel industry is responsible for 4% of greenhouse gas emissions – the same as the countries of Germany, France and the U.K. combined. Unchecked, fashion production would account for 26% of all carbon emissions by 2050.
Fashion is one of the most polluting of all industries. Clothing is manufactured with highly toxic dyes and heavy metals that are flushed into clean water streams, rivers and aquifers where they sicken people and animals, harm ecosystems, and cause biodiversity loss.
The industry razes 150 million trees for cellulosic fabrics. Cattle grazing has contributed to deforestation in the Amazon and the leather produced from that region has been traced to global fashion brands’ shoes and bags.
Non-organic cotton farming heavily depletes and degrades soil. It is one of the world’s most pesticide intensive crops. These affect the health of farmers and populations nearby. The toxic farm runoff contaminates fresh waters, wetlands and aquifers and threatens biodiversity and eco-systems.l
62% of all clothing is made partially or entirely of synthetic fibers such as polyester which is a crude oil derivative. Petroleum is a non-renewable resource with significant negative impacts on the earth.
Up to 40% of fashion’s carbon emissions are from the production of polyester and polyester production is expected to grow by 47% over the next 10 years.
Washing our synthetic clothing accounts for 35% of all microplastics in the ocean making them the largest source of microplastic pollution in the world’s oceans. Microplastics infiltrate the food chain and, in a study in the Netherlands in March 2022, microplastics were found in the blood of 80% of those tested, half of which were PET (polyethylene terephthalate), the plastic material found in clothing.
Clothing production has doubled since 2000 and with a shifting population and consumption patterns, the fast fashion industry is expected to continue to grow. By 2030, one estimate suggests that clothing consumption will grow 63% along with a rise since 2015 of 2.4 billion people into the global middle class, and a recent report estimated the world is on track to triple clothing production by 2050.
The true cost of fast fashion’s cheap clothing is extracted from the industry’s factory garment workers. Workers are paid less than the minimum wage in countries in the global south which does not nearly constitute a “living” wage. Today 40 million people are living in ‘modern slavery’ with fashion the 2nd biggest contributor to this. Child labor is common.
In order for true recycling to take place, clothing must be collected, sorted and distributed to recyclers. These systems are in their infancy. Sorting is still done by hand. And while there are innovative technologies that can break down the fabric of used garments to make new clothing, many await business investment to scale their systems to the colossal size necessary. Fully scaled, however, these technologies could drive 80% circularity in the fashion industry.
Most major industries are highly regulated. But the fashion industry, one of the largest manufacturing industries on the planet, is almost entirely unregulated.

Put plastic in the past.An estimated 583 billion plastic bottles were produced in 2021. That is 100 billion more than we...
04/17/2023

Put plastic in the past.
An estimated 583 billion plastic bottles were produced in 2021. That is 100 billion more than were produced just five years ago.
This year, five trillion plastic bags will be used. That’s 160,000 every second!
Americans alone use half a billion drinking straws every day.
In 2017, packaging production constituted the highest-demanded use for plastic, with 146 million metric tons used.
The amount of single-use plastics used globally has tripled since the start of the pandemic, with takeout orders driving the increase.
Each year, enough Bubble Wrap is created globally to cover the distance between the earth and the moon.
In the U.S., we throw away more than 50 billion coffee cups every year. These are coated with plastic to laminate the inside and use plastic lids.
Around the world, people litter more than 4.5 trillion cigarette butts every year.

04/11/2023

WHAT IS A FOODPRINT?

A foodprint measures the environmental impacts associated with the growing, producing, transporting, and storing of our food— from the natural resources consumed to the pollution produced to the greenhouse gasses emitted.

While we should all be working to reduce our foodprints, there are many factors, including access, affordability, health and culture that help shape our decisions about what we eat. There is not one prescribed diet for everyone. In the name of Earth Day, become a climate leader by taking the 20/20 Foodprints for the Future Pledge.

Sofi Ventura will donate $1 to The Canopy Project for every resident that takes the 20/20 Foodprints for the Future Pledge!
Pledge to reduce consumption of animal products by 20% and reduce food waste by 20%.

Here’s how:

Make the pledge on Facebook and tag us in your post
See a staff member in the leasing office
Stop by during the monthly resident event

Earth Day Climate-Friendly Recipes
Foodprint Calculators

01/25/2023

Address

1008 Carolan Avenue
Burlingame, CA
94010

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 6pm
Tuesday 9am - 6pm
Wednesday 9am - 6pm
Thursday 9am - 6pm
Friday 9am - 6pm
Saturday 9:30am - 5:30pm

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