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He visited Cambridge Science Park, with Sir John Butterfield, later returning to the New Museums Site at Cambridge, to give a lecture at the Babbage Lecture Theatre [16] Princess Margaret visited the building on 19 October 1985. [17] The deputy director of the Education Commission of China, Yang Hai bo visited in December 1986 [18]
The large wire spool in the University Park Common is a reminder of the property's former use as home to the Simplex Wire & Cable Company. University Park at MIT is a mixed-use urban renewal project in Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States, occupying land near Central Square between the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) campus and the primarily residential neighborhood of ...
Tallest building in Cambridge since April 2, 2019. [1] [2] 2 Akamai Technologies Global Headquarters 297 ft (91 m) 20 2019 Pickard Chilton 145 Broadway [3] [4] 3 Boston Marriott Cambridge 290 ft (88 m) 26 1988 Moshe Safdie & Associates 2 Cambridge Center, Area 2/MIT Tallest building built in the 1980s. [5] [6] 4 Google Cambridge 288.5 ft (87.9 m)
University Park at MIT; Urban Rowhouse (26–32 River Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts) Urban Rowhouse (30–38 Pearl Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts) Urban Rowhouse (40–48 Pearl Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts)
Historic photo shows three 9-story buildings surrounding low-rise 549 Technology Square (at center), with Draper Lab visible (at right edge of picture). Tech Square was jointly developed by Cabot, Cabot & Forbes (CCF) and MIT on a 14-acre (5.7 ha) site which had previously housed a tenement (demolished in 1957) and a Lever Brothers soap factory (closed in 1959).
The New Museums Site is an eclectic mixture of grand Victorian and Edwardian buildings erected between 1863 and 1911, such as the Old Cavendish Laboratory; [4] brown-brick buildings from the 1930–40s, largely utilitarian with the exception of the Mond Building; and modernist glass-and-concrete buildings dating from the 1960s and 1970s, such as the Arup Building and the Materials Science and ...
Cambridge Discovery Park is master-planned and permitted for 820,000 sf and is being developed in phases. Building 100 (150,00sf +/-) was first developed and leased by the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory; Building 200-300 (200,000 sf +/-LEED-Gold certified) followed and is currently leased by Forrester Research, and a 650 space +/-parking garage also has been developed.
The Cambridge city directory of 1861 reported the earthworks to be five years old in appearance and in excellent condition; the total cost of Fort Washington Park, was $9,504.05. [4] In 1965 the state passed legislation authorizing the city of Cambridge to transfer the park to the United States government as a historic landmark. [5]