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Blue Hills Reservation is a 7,000-acre (2,800 ha) state park in Norfolk County, Massachusetts in the United States. Managed by the Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation , it covers parts of Milton , Quincy , Braintree , Canton , Randolph , and Dedham .
The Comfort Station is located on the east side of Canton Avenue (Massachusetts Route 138) on the northwestern slope of Great Blue Hill.It is set near the parking area for the Trailside Museum, a contact facility for persons making use of the Blue Hills Reservation.
The Blue Hills Reservation Parkways are a network of historic parkways in and around the Blue Hills Reservation, a Massachusetts state park south of Boston, Massachusetts. It consists of six roadways (in seven distinct segments) that provide circulation within the park, and that join the park to two connecting parkways, the Blue Hills Parkway ...
The Blue Hills Reservation was one of its largest properties, and it became a popular destination for passive and active recreation. In order to properly manage the reservation, the MPC (which was later renamed the Metropolitan District Commission or MDC) commissioned Stickney & Austin, prominent Boston architects, to design the main elements ...
Blue Hills Ski Area is located on the western face of Great Blue Hill in Canton, Massachusetts. [1] This land is part of the Blue Hills Reservation, a state park managed by the Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation. Blue Hills has eight trails covering a vertical drop of 309 feet (94 m).
Great Blue Hill is a hill of 635 feet (194 m) located within the Blue Hills Reservation in Milton, Randolph and Canton, Massachusetts, about 10 miles (16 km) south of downtown Boston. It is the highest point in Norfolk County and the Greater Boston area.
It is located on the Skyline Trail near the summit of Great Blue Hill in the Blue Hills Reservation, south of Boston, Massachusetts. Eliot was a driving force in the establishment of many of the Greater Boston area's early parks, including the Blue Hill Reservation. The bridge was built out of locally quarried granite, and completed c. 1905–06.
The parkway is a connecting road between the Blue Hills Reservation and the Neponset River Reservation, [2] and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2003. [1] The parkway's northern terminus is a six-way intersection in southern Mattapan, a neighborhood in the far south of Boston.