The EGE
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As I do my station layout diagrams and historical research about the MBTA, I discover a lot of interesting tidbits like lesser-known entrances and corridors, weird historical connections, and useless trivia. I'd like to share some of it with all of you in the most obnoxious way: a quiz. Today's edition is all about Alewife, and you can find my layouts of the station here.
Please don't use the Wikipedia articles about the station or the Red Line, as many of the questions are pulled directly from there. But any other resources are fair game, including all the images on Wikimedia Commons. This isn't an easy quiz; wild guessing and silly answers are, of course, encouraged.
Please don't use the Wikipedia articles about the station or the Red Line, as many of the questions are pulled directly from there. But any other resources are fair game, including all the images on Wikimedia Commons. This isn't an easy quiz; wild guessing and silly answers are, of course, encouraged.
- The station is named for the Alewife Brook Parkway. What other current and former stations are named for parkways?
- The alewife is a fish which gives its name to the brook, and from there the parkway. At what other MBTA station could an alewife have a good time - and at what station would it have had a really bad time 2500 years ago?
- The underground concourse level is a maze. In how many different ways/places can you leave street level (via stairs, ramp, etc) for concourse level?
- What two public doors into the station are largely hidden except to some users of one specific mode? What doors are better known, but never used?
- What do Alewife, Harvard, Back Bay, Ruggles, and Wellington have in common?
- Of the seven examples of public art in the station, six were part of the Arts on the Line program. One wasn't - which? (A hint: the artist has another work elsewhere in the system.)
- One of the pieces has been moved. Why?
- There was never a railroad station at Alewife, but it was surrounded on every side by rail lines. Which of those lines was built twice some 75 years apart? How does that relate to this path?
- Many pieces of former railroad infrastructure in the area are now used by paths. What one piece is reused for another purpose?
- Eight (pre-covid) MBTA bus routes serve Alewife station - most of which were inherited by the MBTA from other companies. How many different companies were there among the original operators of the routes?
- What politician - whose name is more attached to a different transportation project - was an early supporter of an extension to the Alewife area?
- Almost all the residential and commercial development around Alewife was constructed along with the station or after it opened. What notable exception preceded it?
- Northwest Extension construction was often disruptive, but one location was vastly improved as a result of construction (not as a result of Red Line service). Where?