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In the early 1980s, the Massachusetts Port Authority designated Fidelity Investments and The Drew Company as developers of Commonwealth Pier, [3] which they transformed into the World Trade Center Boston in 1986. In 1998, Fidelity Investments and The Drew Company opened the Seaport Boston Hotel alongside the World Trade Center. [4] [5] [6]
For the two week event, each restaurant selects one of four price points, offering lunch at $22, $27, $32 or $36 and dinner at $36, $41, $46 or $55. Boston restaurants will be rolling out the ...
The Seaport District, or simply Seaport, is a neighborhood in Boston, Massachusetts. It is part of the larger neighborhood of South Boston, and is also sometimes called the Innovation District. [1] The Seaport is a formerly industrial area that has undergone an extensive redevelopment effort in recent years.
"Best Clam Chowder" – Boston Magazine (2017, 2011, 2010) [61] Who’s Who in Food & Beverage in America, James Beard – Roger Berkowitz, 2017 [62] Best Seafood Restaurant, USA Today, 2013 [63] Boston's Most Popular Restaurant, Zagat, every year since 2003 [64] Most Admired Restaurant, Boston Business Journal, 2013 and 2012 [64]
No Name was opened by Nick Contos in 1917 as a stand to serve the fishermen workers on the pier but, over time, turned into a full-service restaurant. [2] The Contos family never named the restaurant. [3] Late in 2019, the restaurant filed for chapter 7 Bankruptcy. [4] [5]
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(Further south is South Boston proper.) The Boston Redevelopment Authority defines the Fort Point District within the neighborhood of South Boston as "an area of approximately 100 acres (0.40 km 2) defined by the Fort Point Channel to the west, Summer Street to the north, the Bypass Road to the east, and West 2nd Street to the south." [4]
Hotel Touraine (1897-1966) in Boston, Massachusetts, was a residential hotel on the corner of Tremont Street and Boylston Street, near the Boston Common. The architecture firm of Winslow and Wetherell designed the 11-story building in the Jacobethan style, constructed of "brick and limestone;" [1] its "baronial" appearance was "patterned inside and out after a 16th-century chateau of the dukes ...