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Once viewed as home of gentlemen, but now considered to be a run-down area. [4] Former home of a railway station known as Biddle Street Station. [5] Part of route of Bus Route 5. Broening Highway: O'Donnell Street to Baltimore Beltway: O'Donnell Heights: Riverside Generating Station
Major streets in the city of Baltimore, Maryland, either in the downtown area or covering a large part of the city. Wikimedia Commons has media related to Streets in Baltimore . Pages in category "Streets in Baltimore"
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_streets_in_Baltimore,_Maryland&oldid=1056477429"
Baltimore Street is the north-south dividing line for the U.S. Postal Service. [1] It is not uncommon for locals to divide the city simply by East or West Baltimore, using Charles Street or I-83 as a dividing line. [citation needed] The following is a list of major neighborhoods in Baltimore, organized by broad geographical location in the city:
The area was developed primarily between 1900 and 1940, radiating from the streetcar line that ran along Edmondson Avenue, an east–west thoroughfare. It includes significant portions of the Evergreen Lawn, Bridgeview/Greenlawn, Rosemont, and Midtown-Edmondson neighborhoods, including hundreds of buildings, many of them residential rowhouses.
Edmondson Avenue (in Baltimore) to Frederick: Ellicott City West Friendship Cooksville Lisbon: Brick House on the Pike "Baltimore National Pike" is the designation for US-40 throughout Howard County. West of Ellicott City, US-40 merges into I-70, and the two routes share a path until Frederick. This part of I-70 is also known as Baltimore ...
Approaching the downtown area moving south between East Centre and Lexington Streets, St. Paul Street is split into two parallel, nearby streets, also being identified as St. Paul Place in this area. The wider eastern thoroughfare was the former narrow alley-like Courtland Street, once flanked by rows of small brick and stone townhouses.
Between 1996 and 2009, the PPCDC renovated about 300 Patterson Park rowhouses, many vacant. Since 1996, the area's vacancy rate declined from nearly twice that of the rest of Baltimore City to less than the average, the crime rate has dropped to less than half for violent offenses, and the average housing value has nearly tripled.