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Numbering plan areas and area codes since May 2001 September 1997 [1] – May 2001 [2] July 1988 [3] – September 1997 [4] [5] October 1947 – July 1988 [6]. Massachusetts is divided into five distinct numbering plan areas (NPAs), which are served by nine area codes in the North American Numbering Plan (NANP), [7] organized as four overlay complexes and a single-area code NPA.
Route 4 is an 18.26-mile-long (29.39 km) state highway in northeastern Massachusetts.It runs south to north, serving many of Boston's western and northwestern suburbs, from an interchange with Route 2 in Lexington northwest to an intersection with Route 3A in North Chelmsford.
The shield for Massachusetts Route 2, located across from Boston Common The highway then meets a large at-grade intersection with Routes 3 and 16, where Route 2 east merges with U.S. Route 3 south and Route 16 and continues as a four-lane, 35 mile per hour arterial road — managed by the Department of Conservation and Recreation — for the ...
The Wachusett Aqueduct is carried over at least one bridge, and a number of bridges carrying roads (or former roads) over the aqueduct's open channel are contributing structures to its listing on the National Register. The pictured bridge carries Deerfoot Road over the open channel. Walden Street Cattle Pass: 1857, 1869 1994-06-03 Cambridge
also: Buildings and structures: by country: United States: by state: Massachusetts: Bridges Bridges in the U.S. state of Massachusetts . Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bridges in Massachusetts .
Below is a list of covered bridges in Massachusetts. As of 2003 [update] , there were twelve authentic covered bridges in the U.S. state of Massachusetts of which seven are historic. [ 1 ] : 60 A covered bridge is considered authentic not due to its age, but by its construction.
The Burkeville Covered Bridge is a historic covered bridge, carrying Main Poland Road over the South River in Conway, Massachusetts.Probably built in 1870, it is a regionally rare example of a multiple kingrod bridge with iron tensioning verticals (a modified Howe truss system), and one of a few 19th century covered bridges to survive in Massachusetts.
The bridge over Canal Street was replaced in 1917. The viaduct is one of the largest of the state's 19th-century masonry bridge structures, second in size only to the Canton Viaduct . [ 2 ] In the late 1960s, floodwaters washed away an abutment of the adjoining trestle to the east, ending service over the viaduct.