Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
North Worcester West Side East Side Central Downtown South Worcester Greendale: Forest Grove: Great Brook Valley: Elm Park: Lincoln Square [2] Webster Square Burncoat: Salisbury Street: Booth Apartments Area: Crown Hill/Piedmont: Federal Square [2] South Worcester (proper) Indian Hill: Tatnuck: Brittan Square: Main Middle: Worcester Common ...
WORCESTER ― A tiny forest to add greenery, relaxation and environmental benefits is coming to a high-rise apartment building in the city. Plumley Village Apartments, at 16 Laurel St., is the ...
Eastern Worcester is all of the city east of the north-south route of I-190 and I-290. Northwestern Worcester is the part of the city west of those highways and north of Massachusetts Route 122. Finally, southwestern Worcester covers the area south of Route 122 and west of the highways.
The Elm Street Historic District encompasses a collection of high-style Queen Anne Victorian three-decker houses in Worcester, Massachusetts.Normally a building style intended for occupation by the working classes of the city, these stylish buildings were built 1904–06 facing Elm Park on the fashionable west side, and attracted a higher class of occupant. [2]
The Forest Hill Cottage is located in the hills of eastern Worcester, on the east side of Windsor Street near its junction with Forestdale Road. It is a 1-1/2 wood-frame structure, oriented facing south. It has asymmetrical massing, with varied steeply pitched gables, narrow arched windows, and board-and-batten siding.
A second Miyawaki forest will be planted at Plumley Village Apartments, 16 Laurel St. Public plantings will happen there from 4 to 6 p.m. May 1 and from 10 a.m. to noon May 18.
As for how much of a financial blow Worcester's urban forest sustained this year when the U.S. Forest Service rejected Worcester’s application for $23.5 million to plant a total of 7,000 trees ...
The Crystal Street Historic District is a group of three triple deckers facing University Park in the Main South area of Worcester, Massachusetts.The houses appear to have been built for developer James Harrop, who lived at 30 Crystal Street and owned them for 35 years.