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Tallest building in Cambridge since April 2, 2019. [1] [2] 2 Akamai Technologies Global Headquarters 297 ft (91 m) 20 2019 Pickard Chilton 145 Broadway [3] [4] 3 Boston Marriott Cambridge 290 ft (88 m) 26 1988 Moshe Safdie & Associates 2 Cambridge Center, Area 2/MIT Tallest building built in the 1980s. [5] [6] 4 Google Cambridge 288.5 ft (87.9 m)
Location of Cambridge in Massachusetts. This is a list of sites listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Cambridge, Massachusetts. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are ...
Pages in category "Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in Cambridge, Massachusetts" The following 105 pages are in this category, out of 105 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
A building once part of the Kendall Boiler and Tank Company, a landmark at Binney and Third Streets. Originally a salt marsh on the Charles River between Boston and Cambridge, [5] Kendall Square has been an important transportation hub since the construction of the West Boston Bridge in 1793, [citation needed] which provided the first direct wagon route between the two settlements.
Longfellow House–Washington's Headquarters National Historic Site. West Cambridge, also known as "Area 10", is a neighborhood in Cambridge, Massachusetts.It is bounded by the Charles River on the south, JFK Street on the east, Concord Avenue on the north, and Fresh Pond, Aberdeen Avenue, and the Watertown line on the west.
Cambridge Grant is nearly unique in retaining a significant number of early homes and outbuildings in their original settings, with almost no encroachment from later building episodes. Today the Cambridge Grant Historic District contains seven Federal Architecture period homes dating from 1787/88 to 1834, together with barns and outbuildings ...
Brattle Street in Cambridge, Massachusetts, called the "King's Highway" or "Tory Row" before the American Revolutionary War, [1] is the site of many buildings of historical interest, including the modernist glass-and-concrete building that housed the Design Research store, [2] and a Georgian mansion where George Washington and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow both lived (though at different times ...
The Deacon Thomas Kendall House is a historic house at One Prospect Street in Wakefield, Massachusetts. This timber frame, 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story five-bay house has Federal styling, but its massive central chimney indicates that parts of the house likely predate the Federal period, and in a style that predates 1750 (Dea. Kendall lived 1618–1681).