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The Hub on Causeway is a 1,500,000 sq ft (139,400 m 2) mixed-use development in West End, Boston adjoining the TD Garden and North Station. It stands on the former site of Boston Garden, which was razed in 1998. Before its construction, the old Garden footprint served as employee parking. [1]
South Station, officially The Governor Michael S. Dukakis Transportation Center at South Station, is the largest railroad station and intercity bus terminal in Greater Boston and New England's second-largest transportation center after Logan International Airport. [6]
In 2020, Massachusetts CVS stores lost controlled substances at a rate several times higher than other pharmacy chains. [94] CVS was fined $5 million by the federal government in 2017 for controlled substance losses and other violations in California pharmacies, and $1.5 million in 2018 for failing to report losses from New York pharmacies. [94]
The first wave of acquisitions. The Consumer Value Store first began in 1963 as a health and beauty retailer in Lowell, Massachusetts, before changing its name to CVS in 1964.. Pharmacies within ...
CVS Specialty is the specialty pharmacy division that provides specialty pharmacy services for individuals with chronic or genetic diseases who require complex and expensive drug therapies. CVS Health operate 24 retail specialty pharmacy stores and 11 specialty mail order pharmacies, making them the largest specialty pharmacy in the United States.
Rosenthal joined CVS in 1969, when the chain had fewer than 100 stores and was known as Consumer Value Stores. By 1984 he had become senior vice-president of marketing, and in 1985 was named president. [1] During his 10 years as president, the company grew 350 percent to $4 billion in revenue. [2]
138–142 Portland Street is a historic commercial building located at the address of the same name in Boston, Massachusetts. [2] Description and history
Sullivan Square is a traffic circle located at the north end of the Charlestown neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts. It is named after James Sullivan, an early 19th-century Governor of Massachusetts. The MBTA Orange Line station of the same name is located just west of the square.