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Davis Square is a major intersection in the northwestern section of Somerville, Massachusetts, United States, where several streets meet: Holland Street, Dover Street, Day Street, Elm Street, Highland Avenue, and College Avenue. The name is often used to refer to the West Somerville neighborhood surrounding the square as well.
Davis station is an underground Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) Red Line rapid transit station located at Davis Square in Somerville, Massachusetts. The accessible station has a single island platform for the Red Line, as well as a dedicated busway on the surface.
Davis Square (the Post Office here is called West Somerville, but Google Maps shows West Somerville as a narrow strip near Alewife Brook Parkway and Mystic Valley Parkway, northwest of Teele Square) Duck Village (north of Beacon Street, just west of Union Square) [65] [66] East Somerville (East of McGrath Highway, between Washington and ...
The following is a timeline for Google Street View, a technology implemented in Google Maps and Google Earth that provides ground-level interactive panoramas of cities. The service was first introduced in the United States on May 25, 2007, and initially covered only five cities: San Francisco, Las Vegas, Denver, Miami, and New York City.
Davis Square: 36: House at 29 Mt. Vernon Street: House at 29 Mt. Vernon Street: September 18, 1989 : 29 Mt. Vernon St. East Somerville: 37: House at 81 Pearl Street: House at 81 Pearl Street: September 18, 1989 : 81 Pearl St.
The Somerville Community Path is a paved rail trail in Somerville, Massachusetts, running 3.2 miles (5.1 km) from the Alewife Linear Park at the Cambridge/Somerville border to East Cambridge via Davis Square. [2] The first portion opened in 1985 along part of the former Fitchburg Cutoff rail line. Extensions opened in 1994 and 2015.
Rosebud is a historic diner building at 381 Summer Street in Somerville, Massachusetts, near Davis Square. The diner was built in 1941 by the Worcester Lunch Car Company for the Nichols and Perivolaris families. [2] It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1999. [1] The original lunch car was 400 square feet.
Located at Porter Square at the intersection of Massachusetts and Somerville Avenues, the station provides rapid transit access to northern Cambridge and the western portions of Somerville. [4] Porter is 14 minutes from Park Street on the Red Line, and about 10 minutes from North Station on commuter rail trains. [4]