Opioid Insights for Action Day: Travel Information

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Opioid Insights for Action Day: Travel Information Opioid Insights for Action Day: Travel Information Event Location |November 16 The State Room 60 State Street, 33rd Floor Boston, MA 02109 Hotel Accommodations Kimpton Nine Zero Hotel 90 Tremont Street Boston, MA 02108 A discounted hotel room block has been reserved on November 15th at the Kimpton Nine Zero Hotel for $249/night. Please email Nora Quinn to reserve your room by October 24th. Airport Boston Logan Airport (BOS) is approximately 5 miles from the hotel and event locations. Arrival and departure Opioid Insights for Action Day will begin at 8:00 a.m. and will end at 3:00 p.m. on Thursday, November 16. Transportation Ground transportation will not be provided. Taxis are easily accessible from the airport, hotel and The State Room. The Kimpton Nine Zero Hotel is a 0.3 mile walk from The State Room. Attire Business casual attire is requested. Get the current Boston weather. Directions to The State Room From the Kimpton Nine Zero Hotel (0.3 miles walking) Exit the hotel heading northwest on Bosworth Street (85 feet). Turn right onto Tremont Street (0.2 miles). Bear right onto Court Street and continue on to State Street (800 feet). The 60 State Street building is on your left. From the Subway The State Room is easily accessible via the Red line (to the Park Street stop, then walk 0.3 miles) or via the Green line (to the Government Center stop, then walk 300 feet). Driving From The North (or Tobin Bridge): Take Interstate 93 South. Take the Government Center Exit 24A. On the third set of lights make a right onto State Street. Take the third right onto Merchants Row to enter the 60 State Street parking garage. Driving From the South: Take Interstate 93 North. Take Exit 23 - Government Center exit (in the tunnel). Come up the ramp. Stay in the left lane and take your first left hand turn. Take your 2nd right onto State Street. Take the third right onto Merchants Row to enter the 60 State Street garage. Driving From The West: Take the Mass Pike – 90 East to Interstate 93 North. Then follow the directions from the South. The 60 State Street building garage is located on Merchants Row (a right-hand turn off of State Street, Starbucks is on the corner). Parking Rates: $40/Day. OptumLabs® Confidential September 2017 | 1 .
Recommended publications
  • Rambles Around Old .Boston
    Rambles Around Old .Boston By Edwin M. Bacon With Drawings by Lester G. Hornby Boston Little, Brown, and Company I9I4 Copyright, I9I4, BY LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY. All rights reserved Published, October, 1914 t.LECTROTYPED BY THE UNIVERSITY PRESS, CAMBRIDGE PRESSWORK: BY LOUIS E. CROSSCUP, BOSTON, U.S. A. Rambles Around Old Boston .. -~~~S!.w·~ .. '·:: _. \ ., - ' . • . i . 'i ... ~.. ., - ' ~-~~ '."'• ::<~ t•~~~,,•· ;· ..... ':' \.. ~--·!,._-' .;:- -... -- _,., ·-· -g - ..... , ... - __ ,. -·::.✓ iWiir. , /~- ,· I . { --~ ...-· : ...i 1·1 i· ,'! ~ \ ·,·\· ~. ' .7 u,; .'; ' .. ' 1 . I \"-,' ._., L J , \• The Old South Chur,k Contents CHAPTER PAGE I. THE STORIED TowN OF "CROOKED LITTLE STREETS" . I II. OLD STATE HousE, DocK SQUARE, F ANEUIL HALL 19 III. CoPP's HILL AND OLD NoRTH (CHRIST) CHURCH REGION . • . 59 IV. THE COMMON AND ROUND ABOUT 87 V. OVER BEACON HILL . 117 VI. THE w ATER FRONT 147 VII. OLD SOUTH, KING'S CHAPEL, AND NEIGHBOR- HOOD. 169 VIII. PICTURESQUE SPOTS . 193 [ V ] Illustrations PAGE The Underground Passage Between old Province Court and Harvard Place . Half-Title The Old South Church . Frontispiece The Frigate Constitution at the Navy Yard . V Dorchester Heights from Meeting House Hill vu.. The Province Court Entrance to the Underground Passage . I Harvard Place . 9 The Old State House . 23 In Dock Square . 31 Faneuil Hall and Quincy Market 39 Quaint Buildings of Cornhill . 49 Copp's Hill Burying Ground . 63 Christ Church . 69 [ vii ] Illustrations PAGE Bunker Hill Monument from the Belfry of Christ Church 77 The Paul Revere House, North Square . 83 On the Common, Showing Park Street Church 93 On Boston Common Mall in front of old St. Paul's .
    [Show full text]
  • Ye Crown Coffee House : a Story of Old Boston
    Close. V i * '3 M ZCjft& I (jib ^ Site of the Crown Coffee House and Fidelity Trust Co. Building in 1916 p Qlrnuin (Enflfet ifym&t A Story of Old Boston BY WALTER K. WATKINS l}l}S&?>Q 1 Published by HENDERSON & ROSS Boston 1916 \>\tf Copyright 1916 Henderson & Ross omuorft jfl In presenting this history of one of Boston's old taverns we not only give to the readers its ancient history but also show how the locality developed, at an early day, from the mudflats of the water front to a business section and within the last quarter century has become the center of a commercial district* This story of the site of the Fidelity Trust Company Building, once that of the Crown Coffee House, is from the manuscript history of "Old Boston Taverns * 'pre- paredby Mr. W. K. Watkins. Pictures andprints are from the collection of Henderson & Ross* Photographs by Paul J* Weber* M m mS m rfffrai "• fr*Ji ifca£5*:: State Street, with the Crown Coffee House Site in the middle background, 191ft The High Street from the Market Place ye Crown Coffee House N 1635 the High Street leading from the Market Place to the water, with its dozen of low thatched- roofed-houses was a great con- trast to the tall office buildings of State Street of today. One of the latest ocean steamers would have filled its length, ending as it did, in the early days, at the waterside where Mer- chants Row now extends. At the foot of the Townhouse Street as it was later called, when the townhouse was built on the site of the Old State House, was the Town's Way to the flats.
    [Show full text]
  • The Wellesley Legenda
    ! t ^«1 ,-„ ll'ffli'llllilill I 'I I Iji Mi i mmm\ lliii I { I I i ii L f ! III?! 1; iqiG. ' L-EGENDA &/m&' SL Advertising . 223 Faculty 16 Alumni Association 181 Graduate Club Class History Freshman Year . 25 Sophomore Year 51 Junior Year . 69 Senior Year 87 Class of 1911 194 Class of 1912 202 Class of 1913 211 Consumers' League . 183 Department Clubs . 175 Introductory Note Through this little collection of manuscripts, gathered after many months of labor on our part, we have endeavored to show something of the manners and customs of the ancient Wellesleians. It has been difficult to obtain reliable infor- mation concerning this tribe, since for most of its acts we can assign no definite reason, and, therefore, cannot trace the underlying conditions leading to these acts. We gather, however, that they were (with a few exceptions) a gentle and peaceful people, whose habits were harmless but amusing. They are, however, well worthy of study on account of their quaint and curious customs, quite different from the customs of any other tribe whose history we have studied. For convenience, we have divided these manuscripts into four periods, known in the language of the tribe as, respec- tively, freshmanyear, sophomoreyear, junioryear, and senior- year — thus taking the tribe from the time of its earliest formation to the time of its fullest development. The followdng lists were discovered in Thf Office, a mysterious retreat inhabited by one of | the deities of the tribe, and consequently held in great awe, especially by the younger members.
    [Show full text]
  • Research & Translation Forum 2018 Event Locations & Directions
    Research & Translation Forum 2018 Event Locations & Directions Nov. 13th | Optional Pre-event Workshop OptumLabs One Main Street, 10th Floor Cambridge, MA 02142 Nov. 14th-15th | R&T Forum The State Room 60 State Street, 33rd Floor Boston, MA 02109 Hotel Accommodations Kimpton Nine Zero 90 Tremont Street Boston, MA 02108 Directions to The State Room From the Kimpton Nine Zero Hotel (0.3 miles walking) Exit the hotel heading northwest on Bosworth Street (85 feet). Turn right onto Tremont Street (0.2 miles). Bear right onto Court Street and continue on to State Street (800 feet). The 60 State Street Building is on your left. From the Subway The State Room is easily accessible via the Red line (to the Park Street stop, then walk 0.3 miles) or via the Green line (to the Government Center stop, then walk 300 feet). Driving From the North (or Tobin Bridge): Take Interstate 93 South. Take the Government Center Exit 24A. On the third set of lights make a right onto State Street. Take the third right onto Merchants Row to enter the 60 State Street parking garage. Driving From the South: Take Interstate 93 North. Take Exit 23 - Government Center exit (in the tunnel). Come up the ramp. Stay in the left lane and take your first left hand turn. Take your 2nd right onto State Street. Take the third right onto Merchants Row to enter the 60 State Street garage. Driving From the West: Take the Mass Pike – 90 East to Interstate 93 North. Then follow the directions from the South.
    [Show full text]
  • Boston a Guide Book to the City and Vicinity
    1928 Tufts College Library GIFT OF ALUMNI BOSTON A GUIDE BOOK TO THE CITY AND VICINITY BY EDWIN M. BACON REVISED BY LeROY PHILLIPS GINN AND COMPANY BOSTON • NEW YORK • CHICAGO • LONDON ATLANTA • DALLAS • COLUMBUS • SAN FRANCISCO COPYRIGHT, 1928, BY GINN AND COMPANY ALL RIGHTS RESERVED PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 328.1 (Cfte gtftengum ^regg GINN AND COMPANY • PRO- PRIETORS . BOSTON • U.S.A. CONTENTS PAGE PAGE Introductory vii Brookline, Newton, and The Way about Town ... vii Wellesley 122 Watertown and Waltham . "123 1. Modern Boston i Milton, the Blue Hills, Historical Sketch i Quincy, and Dedham . 124 Boston Proper 2 Winthrop and Revere . 127 1. The Central District . 4 Chelsea and Everett ... 127 2. The North End .... 57 Somerville, Medford, and 3. The Charlestown District 68 Winchester 128 4. The West End 71 5. The Back Bay District . 78 III. Public Parks 130 6. The Park Square District Metropolitan System . 130 and the South End . loi Boston City System ... 132 7. The Outlying Districts . 103 IV. Day Trips from Boston . 134 East Boston 103 Lexington and Concord . 134 South Boston .... 103 Boston Harbor and Massa- Roxbury District ... 105 chusetts Bay 139 West Roxbury District 105 The North Shore 141 Dorchester District . 107 The South Shore 143 Brighton District. 107 Park District . Hyde 107 Motor Sight-Seeing Trips . 146 n. The Metropolitan Region 108 Important Points of Interest 147 Cambridge and Harvard . 108 Index 153 MAPS PAGE PAGE Back Bay District, Showing Copley Square and Vicinity . 86 Connections with Down-Town Cambridge in the Vicinity of Boston vii Harvard University ...
    [Show full text]
  • A Souvenir Guide to Boston and Environs (1895)
    DOOK A ^rmtk W.s. .no COFYRIGirr DEPOSai ^ c,rON ^^ AND ENVIRONS D I G.W.ARMSTRONG ^ PUBLISHER-BOSTON ! Jos. Schlitz's Arnold & Go's Ogdensburg Famous India Pale Ale and Milwaukee Beer Porter In Wood and Bottles, for the trade and family use. Send orders to . JOSEPH GAHI^, N. E. Agent, TELEPHONE 954. 125 Purchase Street, BOSTON. O O Schlitz's Schlitz's Pale Export Schlitz's and Dark Porter O O Put up in pints and quarts, a id warranted to keep their natural flavor for months in any climate . Also bottler of Imported Kaiser, Pilsener, and Culinbach Beers. Gahm's Malt Extract A FOOD! ATONIC! AN INYIGORATOR! It builds up and strengthens the system of the weak and debilitated ; it aids and hastens the recovery to health and vigor of the Si'c^ and Convalescent and is especially recommended to persons suffering from Indigestion and Dyspepsia. It is an easily assimilated Food which possesses all the invigorating and tonic properties dor- mant in malt in the most pleasing and palatable fortpt. For Sale by all Druggists and Grocers. Otis E. Weld & Co. Successors to JOHN D. & M. WILLIAMS, . IMPORTERS OF Wines and Spr'rits AGENTS Louis Roederer Champagne 1 85 and 1 87 State Street, BOSTON, MASS. THE SEASHORE, LAKE, AND MOUNTAIN HEALTH AND PLEASURE RESORTS OF Eastern and Northern New England Are easily accessible by the frequent trains of the Boston & Maine RAILROAD If you desire to visit some of the historic towns within easy reach of Boston, a short journey will take you to Salem.
    [Show full text]
  • Report of the Treasurer of the Carnival, Held in Boston, April 7 to April 21
    ANNUAL REPORT OF THE TRUSTEES O F T H E For the Year Ending J uly 2 5 t h , 1885. ----- A L S O ----- Report of the Treasurer of the C arnival IN AID OF THE SOLDIERS’ HOME. BOS T 0 N : E. B. STILLINGS & CO., Printers, No. 58 Federal Street. 1 8 8 6 . OFFICERS. PRESIDENT. J o h n G . B . A d a m s . SECRETARY. TREASURER. G e o r g e S. E v a n s . G e o r g e W . C r e a s e y . TRUi TEES. H o r a c e B i n x e y S a r g e n t . J a m e s F . M e e c h . G e o r g e S. E v a n s . G e o r g e H . P a t c h . S a m u e l D a l t o n . A n d r e w J. B a i l e y . W . S y m i n g t o n B r o w n . J o s e p h F . L o v e r i n g . J o h n G. B . A d a m s . E . G. W . C a r t w r i g h t . Ch a r l e s W . W i l c o x . G e o r g e W . C r e a s e y . N a t .
    [Show full text]
  • The Children's Place at Sixty State Street
    The Children’s Place at Sixty State Street At The Children’s Place at Sixty State Street, your child will be safe, Bright Horizons is trusted by parents around the country to care well cared for, loved and supported for their children. We’ve implemented enhanced COVID-19 safety protocols to ensure that all of our health and safety by our skilled teachers. Our carefully practices in every center are informed by guidance from the CDC crafted back-up care program is and state and local municipalities, and have the well-being of there for every step, with age children, families, and staff at their core. appropriate programs to encourage curious, happy, and confident Enhanced Operating Protocols children at every age and stage. Nonessential visitors are not permitted in the center Our center has been welcoming Posted health notice restricting entry families since 1990 for their back-up, Drop-offs/pick-ups are restricted to the lobby or outside the school vacation, and summer care center needs. Throughout the year, we offer Reduced class sizes – determined with reference to virtual family information sessions applicable local guidance and workshops, themed program Consistent groupings in separate classrooms weeks, and many other events for children from 6 weeks to 12 years of Enhanced Health and Hygiene Protocols age. Daily temperature and health check conducted on arrival Social distancing is practiced as much as possible If you would like a virtual visit prior to care, we would be more than happy Bright Horizons staff wear face masks/coverings to schedule one at your convenience; Frequent cleaning and disinfecting of high-touch surfaces, our center administrative team can toys, and laundered items be reached at 617-742-4566 or Enhanced COVID-19 exclusion policy restricting center [email protected].
    [Show full text]
  • The Beacon Hill Times the Beacon Hill Times
    APRIL 8, 2021 BOOK YOUR POST IT Call Your Advertising Rep TTHEHE BBEEACONACON HHILLILL TTIMESIMES (781)485-0588 THERE ARE NO TIMES LIKE THESE TIMES Esplanade SPECIAL DELIVERY Association Acting Mayor Janey holds 20th launches campaign annual meeting for four-year term By Dan Murphy By Seth Daniel The Esplanade Association Already sitting in the corner marked a milestone via Zoom office and being the first African on Monday, April 5, when the American and woman to lead the longstanding organization held its City, Acting Mayor Kim Janey 20th annual meeting. released a video at 6 a.m. on Tues- Michael Nichols, executive day morning to officially announce director of the nonprofit that she would be running for mayor in has worked in partnership with the September Preliminary Elec- the Department of Conservation tion. and Recreation for the past two She joins five other candidates decades to care for and maintain who have already announced a the park, detailed big changes run for mayor in what will surely already planned for it in 2021, be a very crowded ballot in Sep- including the planned demolition tember, assuming everyone run- of the Charles River Bistro and a ning gets the required signatures Acting Mayor Kim Janey – the new paint job – and new shade – to be placed for consideration on former Council President – for the Arthur Fiedler Footbridge the ballot. announced on Tuesday that she coming between now and July 1, In the three-minute video, Janey will officially join the race for as well as “widespread” landscap- stressed, “we can’t go back, we mayor.
    [Show full text]
  • State Street a Brief Account of a Boston Way
    STATE STREET A BRIEF ACCOUNT OF A BOSTON WAY PRINTED FOR THE STATE STREET TRUST COMPAN Y M B O STO A SS . N , CO P YR IGHTE D 1 906 S TR E ET TR US T CO MPANY T HE ORNAME NTS ON AGES ONE T IRTY P , H NINE AND FORTY-TWO ARE RE PRODUCED FROM THE STONES MARKING THE SPOT IN STATE STREET WH E RE THE BOSTON MASSACRE O RRE D TH ORNAME NT CCU . E ON PAGE THIRTY-SI"IS A COPY OF THE TABLET ON T HE BUILDING OPPOSITE T HE MASSACRE WALTO N ADVE R TIS ING AND PR I NTING C OMPAN Y BO S TO N MAS S , . THE ORIGINALS OF THE CUTS USED IN THIS PAMPHLET AND MANY OTHER "UAINT AND IN T ERESTING PICTURES MAY BE SEEN ON THE WALLS OF THE MAIN OFFICE O F THE STATE STREET TRUST COMPANY AT 38 STATE STREET B OSTON , ’ o : ‘5 0 “ " s a \c 0 i O“ 0 c . O a g . a 0 . ° a 0 T W HE BEGINNING OF A AY . E street — B os on H is old , as old as t look I itself . If one would for its ori in b ack g , he must go to the days P i ’ before the ur tans of St . Botolph s town set foot upon the hills that run up from Boston Har v bor. E en then he is forced to fall upon con ecture j , and surmise that it may have been the trail which the Indians followed from their camps on Shawmut Hills to their fisheries in the .
    [Show full text]
  • A History to Be Reckoned with at Faneuil Hall LISTEN BOSTON , HISTORY
    DONATE 89.7 WGBH Listen Live: Boston's Local NPR August 8, 2018 A History To Be Reckoned With At Faneuil Hall LISTEN BOSTON , HISTORY Maggie Penman By Maggie Penman REPORTER LISTEN How to Reckon with History at Faneuil Hall On any given summer day, Faneuil Hall is buzzing with tourists, braving the humidity to visit the site known as the “cradle of liberty.” Completed in the 1740s, Faneuil Hall was a meeting place for revolutionaries and abolitionists. But in recent months, many have struggled to square that image with the landmark’s historic connection to slavery. “We're standing here, it's a beautiful day,” Steve Locke said when I met him on Merchants’ Row, just outside of Faneuil Hall. “You would never know that there was a slave market here.” Locke – an artist in residence for the City of Boston – wants to change that. He said, there is a contradiction central to this place. “This is the thing that I think is hard for people,” Locke said. “It is the ‘cradle of liberty.’ Frederick Douglass spoke here, suffragettes spokes here. At the same time, Peter Faneuil was a slaver, and made his money through the trafficking of human beings. Both of those things can be true.” Locke is proposing a memorial to enslaved Africans and African-Americans that would be a bronze “footprint” of a slave auction block, which people could walk on, stand on, and touch. “And if they touch it, they'll realize that it's heated to a constant temperature of 98.6 degrees to evoke the presence of a human body,” he said.
    [Show full text]
  • The Proceedings of the Cambridge Historical Society, Volume 13, 1918
    The Proceedings of the Cambridge Historical Society, Volume 13, 1918 Volume Thirteen Table Of Contents OFFICERS.................................................................................................................. 4 PROCEEDINGS FORTY-THIRD MEETING..........................................................................................5 ​ FORTY-FOURTH MEETING.......................................................................................6 FORTY-FIFTH MEETING...........................................................................................7 ​ ​ ​ PAPERS NO-LICENCE IN CAMBRIDGE..................................................................................9 ​ BY FRANK FOXCROFT BURGOYNE AND HIS OFFICERS IN CAMBRIDGE,1777-1778......................................17 BY SAMUEL FRANCIS BATCHELDER GERRY'S LANDING AND ITS NEIGHBORHOOD........................................................81 BY MARY ISABELL GOZZALDI THE SCHOOLS OF CAMBRIDGE, 1800-1870............................................................89 BY GEORGE GRIER WRIGHT ANNUAL REPORTS SECRETARY AND COUNCIL..................................................................................113 CURATOR...........................................................................................................116 TREASURER.........................................................................................................119 NECROLOGY FLORA VIOLA ALLEN.............................................................................................122 FRANK
    [Show full text]