Charlie_mta
Senior Member
- Joined
- Jul 15, 2006
- Messages
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NIMBY alert. LOL.
Sorry to bump up this thread to ask a question, but does anyone know the history of why Summer St is elevated through the Seaport? The bridge over A Street appears to be quite old, so I'm guessing it predated the recent developments there.
Summer Street on far leftTrain tracks ran under it. It was a giant rail yard.
The top 4 are ... interesting.Here is a 2018 article, Boston magazine top 100 Bldgs in Boston. Let the debate begin. I don't necessarily agree with # 1, but it is the most controversial. Also, 10 listed are in Cambridge so really top 90. Not 1 seaport Bldg in this list, a lot has changed.
Here is a 2018 article, Boston magazine top 100 Bldgs in Boston. Let the debate begin. I don't necessarily agree with # 1, but it is the most controversial. Also, 10 listed are in Cambridge so really top 90. Not 1 seaport Bldg in this list, a lot has changed.
The top 4 are ... interesting.
We found Zombie John Silber's pen name!Holy crap. Whoever put together that list looks at Architecture the way Louis DeJoy looks at the USPS.
We found Zombie John Silber's pen name!
Food for the noggin. An Opinion article in Cambridge Day that questions the benefits of development in Cambridge (and Boston area in general) over livability, sustainability and pushing existing infrastructure and services. The comments section continues the conversation with pros and cons.
I grew up in Cambridge and I can't get over how Cambridge still pictures itself as a small town. Cambridge can sustain a lot more growth, including some supertalls, even with the infrastructure it currently has, and could accommodate additional huge amounts of growth with some transit expansion, including Union to Porter GLX, an LRV Urban Ring along the Grand Junction RR, and a Green Line Branch from the BU area to Harvard Square via West Station. Cambridge is no longer a quaint, provincial little town,, and the sooner the leadership there realizes it, the better,Food for the noggin. An Opinion article in Cambridge Day that questions the benefits of development in Cambridge (and Boston area in general) over livability, sustainability and pushing existing infrastructure and services. The comments section continues the conversation with pros and cons.
Food for the noggin. An Opinion article in Cambridge Day that questions the benefits of development in Cambridge (and Boston area in general) over livability, sustainability and pushing existing infrastructure and services. The comments section continues the conversation with pros and cons.