Projecting our Holiday Spirit in Jamaica Plain
September 16, 2019
Tags: Crowdfunding, Fundraising, Holidays, Jamaica Plain
Celebrate Jamaica Plain and support our community with holiday spirit, technology, and placemaking.
Celebrate Jamaica Plain and support our community with holiday spirit, technology, and placemaking.
3 days, 9 stops, 40 small businesses celebrated. Mayor Martin J. Walsh is returning for the “Mayor on Main” trolley tour, a three-day event that will highlight Boston’s Main Streets districts.
JP Centre/South Main Streets presents the JP Festival Trolley, a free trolley that will span the district and Jamaica Plain.
In Boston’s sea of rowdy, singles-filled Irish bars, this rare Scottish gastropub stands out as unique, friendly, and approachable—just like the ideal date.
Over the course of the past several days, I’ve eaten four of the best lunches of my life. Three, in fact, were on the same block in East Boston’s Maverick Square.
The goal of this campaign is to improve and beautify the Poplar Street sidewalk that runs alongside Adams Park in the heart of Roslindale Village neighborhood in Boston.
Oasis Vegan Veggie Parlor is the coziest corner of Four Corners in Dorchester, an island of calm at the busy intersection where Washington meets three other streets.
There was no place in Boston that sold Vietnamese dessert. While bubble tea shops abound in Boston, the fare Ly and Om now serve at Coco Leaf Dessert Café.
“I’m excited for another year of the ‘Main on Main’ trolley tour, which is an incredible opportunity to celebrate some of Boston’s most dynamic small businesses,” said Mayor Walsh.
The Boston City Council Committee on Small Business and Consumer Affairs held a hearing last Tuesday at the Bruce C. Bolling Building on the opportunities and challenges facing small businesses.
Mayor Martin J. Walsh and the Office of Economic Development today launched Boston's Small Business Center in Mattapan, designed to serve as a one-stop neighborhood resource for small businesses.
Among the plans Boston Mayor Marty Walsh laid out at his second State of the City address was a push for the construction and expansion of parks using six acres of land across the city.