What’s Happening on Main Streets
August 4, 2017
By: Richard Rouse
Tags: Mission Hill Main Streets
Monthly column about Mission Hill Main Streets
Monthly column about Mission Hill Main Streets
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.
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.
A tunnel cap that sits above the Red Line tracks as they run underground through Dorchester from Fields Corner to Ashmont station may see a new life as a biker and pedestrian greenway.
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.
Mission Hill Main Streets (MHMS) is moving to a new location at 812 Huntington Ave.
If you’re missing the bustling farmers market that’s held in Roslindale’s Adams Park during the summer, you’re in luck.
Six new members of the Roslindale Village Main Street Board of Directors attended their first session last week at the annual meeting.
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.
Locally, then-City Councilor Thomas Menino helped usher in an organization that would champion neighborhood improvements and local businesses: Roslindale Village Main Street (RVMS).
Neighbors and city officials will team up this weekend and fan out across the neighborhood in the second of three Boston Shines weekends aimed at tidying the city after a particularly dingy winter.
The American Planning Association (APA) likes what it sees happening in Fields Corner and has named the Dorchester community one of this year’s 10 greatest neighborhoods in America.