Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The radio show Car Talk's offices occupied the third floor of the Abbott Building from 1992 until the show's end in 2014. [15] At the beginning of every episode, hosts Tom and Ray Magliozzi would state they were broadcasting from "Car Talk Plaza" in Harvard (though the show itself was recorded at the WBUR Studio in Boston).
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Donate
Its spine is Harvard Avenue, a major north–south thoroughfare connecting Allston to points north (generally via Cambridge Street toward Cambridge), and south toward Brookline. The area underwent a population explosion in the early 20th century, and Harvard Avenue was developed roughly between 1905 and 1925 as a commercial and residential spine.
Massachusetts Avenue (colloquially referred to as Mass Ave) is a major thoroughfare in Boston, Massachusetts, and several cities and towns northwest of Boston.According to Boston magazine, "Its 16 miles of blacktop run from gritty industrial zones to verdant suburbia, homeless encampments, passing gentrified brownstones, college campuses and bustling commercial strips."
It includes houses on both sides of the street, numbered from 335 to 344 inclusive, an area that marks the summit of Dana Hill. Harvard Street was laid out as a direct route from "Old Cambridge" (now Harvard Square) to Boston in the early 1800s, and was run over Dana Hill over the objection of Judge Francis Dana, whose estate sat on top of the ...
Harvard Street – Harvard Square, Allston, Cambridge: Interchange: 3.1: 5.0: I-90 / Mass Pike / Western Avenue / Cambridge Street – Central Square, Cambridge: Interchange; exit 131 on I-90 / Mass Pike: Fenway–Kenmore: 4.1: 6.6: University Road – Brookline: Interchange; eastbound exit and entrance: Storrow Drive east: Continuation beyond ...
Map of the land owned or leased by colleges and universities in the Boston area as of 2021. This is a list of colleges and universities in metropolitan Boston.Some are located within Boston proper while some are located in neighboring cities and towns, but all are within the 128/95/1 loop.
The flats between Tremont Street and the railroad causeway were filled and developed during the 1860s, becoming the west portion of the South End. [9] The disused Chickering station in 1906. In September 1872, the B&P purchased a 6,221 square feet (577.9 m 2) parcel at Camden Street from the Boston Water Power Company.