Chinatown Main Street Summer Festival marks 14th anniversary
July 8, 2017
By: Valerie Sizhe Li
Tags: Chinatown Main Street
The 14th annual Chinatown Main Street Festival took place July 8 at the Chinatown Park on the Greenway.
The 14th annual Chinatown Main Street Festival took place July 8 at the Chinatown Park on the Greenway.
Chinatown’s own BeanTowne Coffee House on 99 Kneeland Street was recognized, along with volunteer Debbie Ho, in the 21st Annual Boston Main Streets Awards.
For more than three decades the Roslindale Village Main Street (RVMS) Farmers Market has been attracting crowds to the neighborhood to sample food and do crafts while listening to music.
Roslindale Village Main Street launched its annual appeal and board members announced a new strategic plan and a redesign of the general brochure at the group’s annual meeting.
Mayor Martin J. Walsh celebrated the formation of a new partnership between Project Place’s Clean Corners/Bright Hopes program, Washington Gateway Main Street and the Chinatown Main Street as part of
A program of the city of Boston’s Office of Small Business and Office of Women’s Advancement, WE BOS was launched in 2015 to help convene and support women entrepreneurs.
If you’re missing the bustling farmers market that’s held in Roslindale’s Adams Park during the summer, you’re in luck.
Joyce Stanley, Executive Director of Dudley Square Main Street, spoke with the Banner on two decades of promoting and supporting the Roxbury commercial district.
Six new members of the Roslindale Village Main Street Board of Directors attended their first session last week at the annual meeting.
Monday’s meeting was the first of six scheduled before BRA officials hope to submit a finalized plan to the agency’s board in August.
Locally, then-City Councilor Thomas Menino helped usher in an organization that would champion neighborhood improvements and local businesses: Roslindale Village Main Street (RVMS).
Developed by the CEDC, the 11-story structural steel building will provide 67 rental apartments for Chinatown's low-income population.