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Southampton Street Yard south of South Station, Boston southside lines running maintenance and midday storage – primarily an Amtrak heavy maintenance facility Stoughton Layover at Stoughton: Providence/Stoughton Line: layover/storage West Cambridge Maintenance Facility south of Alewife: Maintenance of way equipment storage Westminster Layover
Stylized map of the Boston subway system from 2013. ... 132, 137) Malden: Link ... Replaced with Babcock Street: Boston University West
138–142 Portland Street, Boston, Massachusetts ... 138–142 Portland Street is a historic commercial building located at the address of the same name in Boston ...
Prudential Tower The Prudential Tower behind 111 Huntington Avenue, as seen from the South End Alternative names The Pru Prudential Tower 800 Boylston St General information Status Open Location 800 Boylston Street, Boston, Massachusetts, United States Construction started 1960 Completed 1964 Opened 1965 Owner Boston Properties Management Boston Properties Height Antenna spire 907 ft (276 m ...
The Fabyan building at 26-30 West Street was designed by Coolidge, Shepley, Bulfinch & Abbott, and built in 1926. The Schraffts Building at 16-24 West Street was built in 1922, and housed a flagship candy store and restaurant for more than fifty years. [2] The West Street District was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1980. [1]
The three sisters came to Boston on September 15, 1988, where they set up temporarily at the Convent in the Our Lady of Czestochowa Parish. It was the first international house founded outside of Poland. On October 10, 1993, the sisters moved to the current convent near St. Ann's Parish at the Neponset Ave. in Dorchester.
Exchange Place is a modern skyscraper located at the block of 43–53 State Street or 1 Exchange Place, between Congress and Kilby Streets, in the Financial District of Boston, Massachusetts. Built in 1981–1985, it is tied for Boston's 17th tallest building , standing 510 feet (155 m) tall, and containing 40 floors.
The courthouse, part of the Boston Government Service Center, was built in 1998. It holds the Central Division of the Boston Municipal Court, as well as the court's administrative offices. The building was designed by Kallmann McKinnell & Wood and is named after Edward W. Brooke. [1] The first departments moved into the space in January 1999.