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The Forest Hills viaduct was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted as an important element of the Emerald Necklace. Five new local stations in Dorchester and Jamaica, including Forest Hills, opened on June 1, 1897. [16] The station building at Forest Hills was similar to the still-extant station at Norwood Central, built two years later. [17]
Forest Hills is served by the Forest Hills Station, a local transportation hub operated by the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA). This station is the southern end of the Orange Line , is a stop on the Commuter Rail's Needham Line , and was previously the terminal for the Green Line's E branch , until it was truncated to Heath ...
SL2 bus at South Station. The Silver Line is a six-route bus rapid transit system marketed as rapid transit.It is divided into two branches: Waterfront service (SL1, SL2, SL3, and the rush-hour SLW shuttle) that runs through the South Boston Transitway tunnel, and Washington Street service (SL4 and SL5) that runs on the surface via Washington Street.
Forest Hills station in 1910 Dudley Terminal in 1904 The Washington Street Elevated consisted of six stations, the most complex and major of which were at Dudley Square and Forest Hills. Most of the original stations were designed by architect Alexander Wadsworth Longfellow Jr. , and originally featured much in the way of ornamentation and ...
Forest Hills station (LIRR), a Long Island Rail Road station in Queens, New York; Forest Hills station (MBTA), an MBTA multimodal station in Boston, Massachusetts; Forest Hills station (SEPTA), a SEPTA Regional Rail station in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Forest Hills–71st Avenue (IND Queens Boulevard Line), a New York City Subway station in ...
This is a route-map template for Forest Hills station (MBTA), a Boston subway and commuter rail station.. For a key to symbols, see {{railway line legend}}.; For information on using this template, see Template:Routemap.
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The Boston and Providence Railroad (B&P) opened its main line from Boston through Toll Gate (Forest Hills) to Providence in 1834. A branch line from Forest Hills to Dedham via West Roxbury was opened on July 14, 1849 by the B&P. [3] South Street (), Central (), and West Roxbury all opened with the branch; Highland was added around 1855.