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Back Bay, Boston, Massachusetts

 
Back Bay, Boston, Massachusetts

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Back Bay, Boston, Massachusetts



 
 
Back Bay is an officially recognized neighborhood of Boston
Boston, Massachusetts

Boston is the State capital and largest city of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, and is one of the oldest cities in the United States. The largest city in New England, Boston is considered the economic and cultural center of the region, and is sometimes regarded as the unofficial "Capital of New England." Boston city proper had a 2007 est...
, Massachusetts
Massachusetts

The Commonwealth of Massachusetts is a U.S. state located in the New England region of the Northeastern United States United States. It borders Rhode Island and Connecticut to the south, New York to the west, and Vermont and New Hampshire to the north....
. It is an upscale residential, retail, and commercial office district.

Back Bay and neighboring Beacon Hill
Beacon Hill, Boston, Massachusetts

Beacon Hill is a neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts that is home to about 10,000 people. It is a neighborhood of Georgian architecture rowhouses and is known for its narrow, gas lighting streets and brick sidewalks....
 are considered Boston's most expensive neighborhoods, with townhouses regularly selling for millions of dollars. Popular upmarket shopping destinations include Newbury and Boylston Street
Boylston Street

Boylston Street is the name of a major east-west thoroughfare in the city of Boston, Massachusetts and its western suburbs. It begins as the continuation of Route 9 at the Wellesley/Newton line and serves Newton and Brookline before ending at an intersection with Brookline Ave....
s as well as the Prudential Center
Prudential Tower

The Prudential Tower, also known as the Prudential Building or, colloquially, as The Pru, is a skyscraper in Boston, Massachusetts, Massachusetts....
 and Copley Place
Copley Place

Copley Place is an enclosed shopping mall located in the Back Bay section of Boston, Massachusetts. It is part of a complex that includes office buildings, two hotels, and a parking garage....
 malls.

Architecturally the neighborhood is dominated by Victorian brownstone buildings in its northern, more residential portion; the southern part of the neighborhood is far more commercial and is home to some of Boston's tallest skyscrapers.

boundaries of the Back Bay, as defined by the Neighborhood Association of the Back Bay, are the "Charles River
Charles River

The Charles River is a river in Massachusetts, United States. It travels through 22 cities and towns in eastern Massachusetts, from Hopkinton, Massachusetts to Boston, Massachusetts on the Atlantic Ocean....
 on the North; Arlington Street to Park Square on the East; Columbus Avenue to the New York New Haven and Hartford right-of-way (South of Stuart Street and Copley Place), Huntington Avenue
Huntington Avenue (Boston)

Huntington Avenue is a secondary thoroughfare in the city of Boston, Massachusetts beginning at Copley Square, and continuing west through the Back Bay, Boston, Massachusetts, Fenway-Kenmore, Longwood Medical and Academic Area, and Mission Hill, Boston, Massachusetts neighborhoods....
, Dalton Street, and the Mass. Turnpike
Massachusetts Turnpike

The Massachusetts Turnpike is the easternmost 138-mile stretch of Interstate 90. The Turnpike begins at the western border of Massachusetts in West Stockbridge, Massachusetts connecting with the New York State Thruway#Berkshire Connector portion of the New York State Thruway....
 on the South; Charlesgate East on the West." The block between Charlesgate and Kenmore Square
Kenmore Square

File:Kenmore-Square-January-2009.JPGKenmore Square is a Town square in Boston, Massachusetts, Massachusetts, United States, consisting of the intersection of several main avenues, as well as several other cross streets, and Kenmore , an Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority subway stop....
 is often included as it retains Commonwealth Avenue
Commonwealth Avenue

Commonwealth Avenue is an avenue which may refer to:*Commonwealth Avenue, Boston*Commonwealth Avenue, Canberra*Commonwealth Avenue *Commonwealth Avenue, Singapore...
's central park and pedestrial mall.

The Back Bay Architectural District, which is much smaller, was established by state law in 1966, and is bounded by "the centerlines of Back Street on the north, Embankment Road and Arlington Street on the east, Boylston Street on the south, and Charlesgate East on the west".


The neighborhood gained its name because the area was, in fact, before it was filled in, literally the "Back Bay" for Boston.






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Encyclopedia


Back Bay is an officially recognized neighborhood of Boston
Boston, Massachusetts

Boston is the State capital and largest city of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, and is one of the oldest cities in the United States. The largest city in New England, Boston is considered the economic and cultural center of the region, and is sometimes regarded as the unofficial "Capital of New England." Boston city proper had a 2007 est...
, Massachusetts
Massachusetts

The Commonwealth of Massachusetts is a U.S. state located in the New England region of the Northeastern United States United States. It borders Rhode Island and Connecticut to the south, New York to the west, and Vermont and New Hampshire to the north....
. It is an upscale residential, retail, and commercial office district.

Back Bay and neighboring Beacon Hill
Beacon Hill, Boston, Massachusetts

Beacon Hill is a neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts that is home to about 10,000 people. It is a neighborhood of Georgian architecture rowhouses and is known for its narrow, gas lighting streets and brick sidewalks....
 are considered Boston's most expensive neighborhoods, with townhouses regularly selling for millions of dollars. Popular upmarket shopping destinations include Newbury and Boylston Street
Boylston Street

Boylston Street is the name of a major east-west thoroughfare in the city of Boston, Massachusetts and its western suburbs. It begins as the continuation of Route 9 at the Wellesley/Newton line and serves Newton and Brookline before ending at an intersection with Brookline Ave....
s as well as the Prudential Center
Prudential Tower

The Prudential Tower, also known as the Prudential Building or, colloquially, as The Pru, is a skyscraper in Boston, Massachusetts, Massachusetts....
 and Copley Place
Copley Place

Copley Place is an enclosed shopping mall located in the Back Bay section of Boston, Massachusetts. It is part of a complex that includes office buildings, two hotels, and a parking garage....
 malls.

Architecturally the neighborhood is dominated by Victorian brownstone buildings in its northern, more residential portion; the southern part of the neighborhood is far more commercial and is home to some of Boston's tallest skyscrapers.

Definition of Back Bay

The boundaries of the Back Bay, as defined by the Neighborhood Association of the Back Bay, are the "Charles River
Charles River

The Charles River is a river in Massachusetts, United States. It travels through 22 cities and towns in eastern Massachusetts, from Hopkinton, Massachusetts to Boston, Massachusetts on the Atlantic Ocean....
 on the North; Arlington Street to Park Square on the East; Columbus Avenue to the New York New Haven and Hartford right-of-way (South of Stuart Street and Copley Place), Huntington Avenue
Huntington Avenue (Boston)

Huntington Avenue is a secondary thoroughfare in the city of Boston, Massachusetts beginning at Copley Square, and continuing west through the Back Bay, Boston, Massachusetts, Fenway-Kenmore, Longwood Medical and Academic Area, and Mission Hill, Boston, Massachusetts neighborhoods....
, Dalton Street, and the Mass. Turnpike
Massachusetts Turnpike

The Massachusetts Turnpike is the easternmost 138-mile stretch of Interstate 90. The Turnpike begins at the western border of Massachusetts in West Stockbridge, Massachusetts connecting with the New York State Thruway#Berkshire Connector portion of the New York State Thruway....
 on the South; Charlesgate East on the West." The block between Charlesgate and Kenmore Square
Kenmore Square

File:Kenmore-Square-January-2009.JPGKenmore Square is a Town square in Boston, Massachusetts, Massachusetts, United States, consisting of the intersection of several main avenues, as well as several other cross streets, and Kenmore , an Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority subway stop....
 is often included as it retains Commonwealth Avenue
Commonwealth Avenue

Commonwealth Avenue is an avenue which may refer to:*Commonwealth Avenue, Boston*Commonwealth Avenue, Canberra*Commonwealth Avenue *Commonwealth Avenue, Singapore...
's central park and pedestrial mall.

The Back Bay Architectural District, which is much smaller, was established by state law in 1966, and is bounded by "the centerlines of Back Street on the north, Embankment Road and Arlington Street on the east, Boylston Street on the south, and Charlesgate East on the west".

History

Boston Back Bay


The neighborhood gained its name because the area was, in fact, before it was filled in, literally the "Back Bay" for Boston. To the west of the Shawmut Peninsula
Shawmut Peninsula

Shawmut Peninsula is the promontory of land on which Boston, Massachusetts was built. The peninsula, originally a mere in area, is most remarkable for having more than doubled in size due to land reclamation efforts throughout the 19th century....
, on the far side from Boston Harbor
Boston Harbor

Boston Harbor is a natural harbor located adjacent ot the city of Boston, Massachusetts. It is home to the Port of Boston, a major shipping facility in the northeast....
, a wide bay opened between Boston and Cambridge
Cambridge, Massachusetts

Cambridge is a city in the Greater Boston area of Massachusetts, United States. It was named in honor of the University of Cambridge in England....
, with the Charles River
Charles River

The Charles River is a river in Massachusetts, United States. It travels through 22 cities and towns in eastern Massachusetts, from Hopkinton, Massachusetts to Boston, Massachusetts on the Atlantic Ocean....
 entering at the west side. As with all of the New England
New England

New England is a region of the United States located in the northeastern corner of the country, bounded by the Atlantic Ocean, Canada and New York State, and consisting of the modern U.S....
 coast, the bay was tidal, with water rising and falling several feet over the course of the day. At low water, part of the bottom of the bay was exposed.

In 1814, the Boston and Roxbury Mill Corporation was chartered to construct a mill dam, which would also serve as a toll road
Toll road

A toll road, , is a road for which a driver pays a toll for use. Structures for which tolls are charged include toll bridges and toll tunnels....
 connecting Boston to Watertown
Watertown, Massachusetts

The Town of Watertown is a city in Middlesex County, Massachusetts, Massachusetts, United States. The population was 32,986 at the 2000 census....
, bypassing Boston Neck
Boston Neck

The Boston Neck or Roxbury Neck was an isthmus, a narrow strip of land connecting the peninsular Boston, Massachusetts to the mainland city of Roxbury, Massachusetts ....
. The dam was later buried under present-day Beacon Street.

The Back Bay neighborhood was created when a parcel of land was created by filling the tidewater flats of the Charles River
Charles River

The Charles River is a river in Massachusetts, United States. It travels through 22 cities and towns in eastern Massachusetts, from Hopkinton, Massachusetts to Boston, Massachusetts on the Atlantic Ocean....
. This massive project was begun in 1857. The fill to reclaim the bay from the water was obtained from Needham
Needham

Needham is a surname, and may refer to:* Col Needham, co-founder of the Internet Movie Database* David Needham, an English football player* Ernest Needham, an English football player, lived 1873 - 1936...
 Massachusetts. The firm of Goss and Munson, railroad contractors, built 6 miles of railroad from Needham and their 35-car trains made 16 trips a day to Back Bay. The filling of present-day Back Bay was completed by 1882; filling reached Kenmore Square
Kenmore Square

File:Kenmore-Square-January-2009.JPGKenmore Square is a Town square in Boston, Massachusetts, Massachusetts, United States, consisting of the intersection of several main avenues, as well as several other cross streets, and Kenmore , an Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority subway stop....
 in 1890, and finished in the Fens
Back Bay Fens

The Back Bay Fens, most commonly called simply The Fens, is a parkland and urban wild in Boston, Massachusetts, in the United States.Designed by Frederick Law Olmsted to serve as a link in the Emerald Necklace park system, the Fens gives its name to the Fenway-Kenmore neighborhood, which in turn gives their name to Fenway Park, the...
 in 1900. The project was the largest of a number of land reclamation
Land reclamation

Land reclamation is either of two distinct practices. One involves creating new land from sea- or riverbeds, the other refers to restoring an area to a more natural state ....
 projects, beginning in 1820, which, over the course of time, more than doubled the size of the original Boston peninsula
Peninsula

A peninsula is a piece of Landform that is nearly surrounded by water but connected to mainland via an isthmus. Word origin: Latin paeninsula : paene, almost + insula, island....
. It is frequently observed that this would have been impossible under modern environmental regulations.
Oldandnewboston
Back Bay's development was planned by architect Arthur Gilman
Arthur Gilman

Arthur Delevan Gilman was an American architect, designer of many Boston neighborhoods, and member of the American Institute of Architects. Gilman was a descendant of Edward Gilman Sr., one of the first settlers of Exeter, New Hampshire....
 with Gridley James Fox Bryant
Gridley James Fox Bryant

Gridley James Fox Bryant was a famous 19th century Boston, Massachusetts architect and builder. His work was seen in custom houses, government buildings, churches, schoolhouses, and private residences across the United States....
. Strict regulations produced a uniform and well-integrated architecture, consisting mostly of dignified three- and four-story residential (or once-residential) brownstone
Brownstone

Brownstone is a brown Triassic sandstone which was once a popular building material. The term is also understood to be a terraced house clad in this material....
s.

Greatly influenced by Haussmann's renovation of Paris
Haussmann's renovation of Paris

The Haussmann Renovations, or Haussmannisation of Paris, was a work commissioned by Napol?on III and led by the Seine pr?fet, Georges Eug?ne Haussmann between 1852 and 1870, though work continued well after the Second French Empire's demise in 1870....
 in the mid-to-late 19th century, the main thoroughfares of Back Bay emphasize order, with wide, parallel, tree-lined avenues and more homogenous architectural styles. Five east and west corridors run the length of the Back Bay: Beacon Street
Beacon Street

Beacon Street is a major thoroughfare in Boston, Massachusetts and several of its western suburbs. Beacon Street in Boston, Brookline, Massachusetts, Brighton, Massachusetts, and Newton, Massachusetts is not to be confused with the Beacon Street in nearby Somerville, Massachusetts....
 (closest to the Charles River), Marlborough Street, Commonwealth Avenue
Commonwealth Avenue, Boston

Commonwealth Avenue is a major street in the cities of Boston, Massachusetts and Newton, Massachusetts, Massachusetts. It begins at the western edge of the Public Garden , and continues west through the neighborhoods of the Back Bay, Kenmore Square, Allston, Massachusetts, Brighton, Boston, Massachusetts and Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts....
, Newbury Street, and Boylston Street
Boylston Street

Boylston Street is the name of a major east-west thoroughfare in the city of Boston, Massachusetts and its western suburbs. It begins as the continuation of Route 9 at the Wellesley/Newton line and serves Newton and Brookline before ending at an intersection with Brookline Ave....
. With the exception of Commonwealth Avenue, the wide central thoroughfare, these streets are one-way and intersect with north-south cross streets at regular intervals. The north-south cross streets, also one-way, are named alphabetically starting at the Public Garden, and a 1903 guidebook notes an alternation of trisyllabic and bisyllabic names: Arlington, Berkeley, Clarendon, Dartmouth, Exeter, Fairfield, Gloucester, and Hereford. (This same set of street
Road

A road is an identifiable Road number, way or Trail between Location . Roads are typically smoothed, Pavement , or otherwise prepared to allow easy travel; though they need not be, and historically many roads were simply recognizable routes without any formal construction or Maintenance, repair and operations....
 names is used for the long East-West main streets in the center of Gladstone
Gladstone, Oregon

Gladstone is a city located in Clackamas County, Oregon, United States. As of the 2000 census, the city had a total population of 11,438. The 2007 estimate is 12,200 residents....
, Oregon
Oregon

Oregon is a U.S. state in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States. The area was inhabited by many indigenous tribes before the arrival of traders, explorers and settlers....
, but the origin of this connection is unknown).

Perspectives on Back Bay

William Dean Howells
William Dean Howells

William Dean Howells was an United States Realism author and literary critic....
, writing of memories of his first visit to Boston, recalled, "There are the narrow streets, stretching saltworks to the docks, which I haunted for their quaintness... There is Beacon Street, with the Hancock House
Hancock House

Hancock House can refer to:* Hancock House * Hancock House * Hancock House * Hancock House It is also a name sometimes used for the Hancock Manor in Massachusetts....
 where it is incredibly no more, and there are the beginnings of Commonwealth Avenue, and the other streets of the Back Bay, laid out with their basements left hollowed in the made land, which the gravel trains were yet making out of the westward hills."

To the W. C. Fields
W. C. Fields

W. C. Fields was an United States comedian, actor and juggler. Fields created one of the great American comic personas of the first half of the 20th century: a misanthrope and hard-drinking egotist who remained a sympathetic character despite his snarling contempt for dogs, children, and women....
 character, con artist Cuthbert W. Twillie, it came as naturally as breathing to feign that he was "one of the Back Bay Twillies." However, there was a subtle social distinction between the Back Bay neighborhood and the older Beacon Hill
Beacon Hill, Boston, Massachusetts

Beacon Hill is a neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts that is home to about 10,000 people. It is a neighborhood of Georgian architecture rowhouses and is known for its narrow, gas lighting streets and brick sidewalks....
 district. A 1921 novel, By Advice of Counsel, characterizes one Bostonian by saying:

"William Montague Pepperill was a very intense young person, twenty-six years old, out of Boston by Harvard College. ... There had been an aloof serenity about his life within the bulging front of the paternal residence with its ancient glass window panes—faintly tinged with blue, just as the blood in the Pepperill veins was also faintly tinged with the same color... For W.M.P. the only real Americans lived on Beacon Hill, though a few perhaps might be found accidentally across Charles Street upon the made land of the Back Bay. A real American must necessarily also be a graduate of Harvard, a Unitarian, an allopath, belong to the Somerset Club and date back ancestrally at least to King Philip's War."


By 1900, most of the building up of Back Bay was done, as noted by the architectural historian Bainbridge Bunting in 1967:
"By 1900 the Back Bay residential area had almost ceased to grow. After 1910 only thirty new houses were constructed, after 1917 none at all. Instead of paying high prices for filled land on which to erect a home within walking distance of his office, the potential home builder escaped to the suburbs on the electric trolley or in his automobile. This flight from the city left empty much of the area west of Kenmore Square and adjacent to Fenway Park, and only later was it occupied by non-descript and closely-built apartments."


Back Bay today

Backbay
Culturally speaking, the Back Bay is known for being the home of the wealthy and the upper middle class. It is best-known for its expensive housing and shopping areas. Most stores are located on Newbury and Boylston Streets, with the ends closer to the Boston Public Garden
Boston Public Garden

The Public Garden, also known as Boston Public Garden, is a large park located in the heart of Boston, Massachusetts, Massachusetts, adjacent to the Boston Common ....
 traditionally more expensive. The Back Bay is dense with luxury hotels that include the Copley Square Hotel
Copley Square Hotel

The Copley Square Hotel is a hotel in the Back Bay area of Boston, Massachusetts. It was built in 1891 on Huntington Avenue and Exeter Street, and has the distinction of being the city?s second-oldest hotel in continuous operation....
, the Colonnade Hotel, Westin Copley Place, Fairmont Copley Plaza, and the largest hotel in the city, the Boston Marriott Copley Place
Marriott Hotels & Resorts

Marriott Hotels & Resorts is Marriott International's flagship brand of full service hotels and resorts.As of December 2005, there were 482 hotels and resorts operating under the brand....
. The new Mandarin Oriental, Boston opened in October 2008, with an arcade area housing a number of upscale designer boutiques and restaurants.

The Copley Square area is close to the Back Bay railroad terminal
Back Bay (MBTA station)

Back Bay Station, located at 145 Dartmouth Street, between Stuart Street and Columbus Avenue, is a train station in the Back Bay, Boston neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts....
, and is the eastern nexus of a system of hotels and shopping centers connected by a set of glassed-in pedestrian overpasses.

The large Copley Place mall includes the first Neiman Marcus
Neiman Marcus

Neiman Marcus is a luxury specialty retail department store, operated by the Neiman Marcus Group in the United States. The company is headquartered in Dallas, Texas, Texas, and competes with other exclusive department stores such as Barneys New York, Saks Fifth Avenue, Nordstrom, Lord & Taylor, and Bloomingdale's....
 opened in the New England area. The system of overpasses extends over half a mile to the Prudential Center
Prudential Tower

The Prudential Tower, also known as the Prudential Building or, colloquially, as The Pru, is a skyscraper in Boston, Massachusetts, Massachusetts....
 and the shops surrounding it. The 52-story Prudential Tower
Prudential Tower

The Prudential Tower, also known as the Prudential Building or, colloquially, as The Pru, is a skyscraper in Boston, Massachusetts, Massachusetts....
, thought a marvel in 1964, is now considered ugly by some. However, the Prudential Skywalk observatory offers wonderful views of Back Bay, Boston, and surrounding areas.

Architecture of Back Bay

The residential streets of Back Bay are some of the best preserved examples of late 19th century urban architecture in the US. Copley Square
Copley Square

Copley Square, named for the American portraitist John Singleton Copley , is a Town square located in the Back Bay, Boston neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts, Massachusetts....
, bounded by Clarendon, Boylston, Dartmouth, and St. James streets, includes Trinity Church
Trinity Church, Boston

Trinity Church in the City of Boston, located in the Back Bay of Boston, Massachusetts, is a parish of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts....
, the Boston Public Library
Boston Public Library

The Boston Public Library is the largest municipal public library in the United States. It was the first publicly supported municipal library in the United States, the first large library open to the public in the United States, and the first public library to allow people to borrow books and other materials and take them home to read and use...
, the John Hancock Tower
John Hancock Tower

Three different buildings in Boston, Massachusetts, have been known as the "John Hancock Building". All were built by the John Hancock Insurance companies....
, and other notable examples of architecture.

The "Back Bay Historic District" was listed on the National Register of Historic Places
National Register of Historic Places

The National Register of Historic Places is the United States government official list of districts, sites, buildings, structures, and objects deemed worthy of preservation....
 on August 14, 1973.

The Prudential Center was awarded the Urban Land Institute's Award for Best Mixed use Property in 2006.

MIT and the Natural History Museum

Prior to 1900, the Back Bay was the site of some of Boston's leading institutions. The first to make its home there was the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Massachusetts Institute of Technology

The Massachusetts Institute of Technology is a private university research university located in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Massachusetts, United States....
 (MIT), founded in 1861. By 1900, MIT had expanded into many buildings around Copley Square. MIT’s original building, one of the first monumental structures in Back Bay, was named the Rogers Building after its founder, William Barton Rogers
William Barton Rogers

William Barton Rogers is best known for setting down the founding principles, advocating for, and finally incorporating the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1861....
. It was located on Boylston Street not too far from Copley Square and was designed by William G. Preston together with a building for the Natural History Society. In 1916, MIT moved to its new and more capacious location across the Charles River in Cambridge
Cambridge, Massachusetts

Cambridge is a city in the Greater Boston area of Massachusetts, United States. It was named in honor of the University of Cambridge in England....
.

The MIT building no longer survives, having been torn down in 1921 for the New England Life Building (also called: Stephen L. Brown Building). The Natural History Society building does survive and now houses the upscale clothier Louis Boston.

Copley Square

The first monumental building on the square was the Museum of Fine Arts
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

The Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, Massachusetts, Massachusetts, is one of the largest museums in the United States attracting over one million visitors a year....
 building. Begun in 1870, it opened in 1876, with a large portion of its collection taken from the Boston Athenaeum Art Gallery. Its red Gothic Revival style building was torn down and rebuilt as the Copley Plaza Hotel
Copley Plaza Hotel

The Fairmont Copley Plaza hotel is a four-star hotel in downtown Boston, Massachusetts owned by Fairmont Hotels and Resorts.It opened in 1912 on St....
 (1912) which still exists today.

  • Trinity Church
    Trinity Church, Boston

    Trinity Church in the City of Boston, located in the Back Bay of Boston, Massachusetts, is a parish of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts....
     (1872-77), designed by H. H. Richardson.


This is one of Richardson's masterpieces. In 1893, Baedeker's United States called it "deservedly regarded as one of the finest buildings in America."

  • The Boston Public Library
    Boston Public Library

    The Boston Public Library is the largest municipal public library in the United States. It was the first publicly supported municipal library in the United States, the first large library open to the public in the United States, and the first public library to allow people to borrow books and other materials and take them home to read and use...
     (1888-1892), designed by McKim, Mead, and White
    McKim, Mead, and White

    McKim, Mead, and White was a prominent architect in the eastern United States at the turn of the twentieth century. The firm consisted of Charles Follen McKim, William Mead, and Stanford White....
    .


It is a leading example of the Beaux-Arts style in the US. Sited across Copley Square from Trinity Church, it was intended to be "a palace for the people." Baedeker
Baedeker

Verlag Karl Baedeker is a Germany-based publisher and pioneer in the business of worldwide travel guides. The guides, often referred as simply "Baedekers" , contain important introductions, descriptions of buildings, of museum collections, etc., written by the best specialists, and are frequently revised in order to be up to date....
's 1893 guide terms it "dignified and imposing, simple and scholarly," and "a worthy mate... to Trinity Church." At that time, its 600,000 volumes made it the largest free public library in the world.

  • The Old South Church, also called the New Old South Church (645 Boylston Street on Copley Square), 1872-1875.


Located across the street from the Boston Public Library, it was designed by the Boston architectural firm of Cummings and Sears in the Venetian Gothic style. The style follows the precepts of the British cultural theorist and architectural critic John Ruskin
John Ruskin

John Ruskin was a British art critic and social thought, also remembered as an author, poet and artist. His essays on art and architecture were extremely influential in the Victorian era and Edwardian period eras....
 (1819 – 1900) as outlined in his treatise The Stones of Venice. Old South Church remains a significant example of Ruskin's influence on architecture in the US. Charles Amos Cummings
Charles Amos Cummings

Charles Amos Cummings , nineteenth century American architect and architectural historian who worked primarily in the Venetian Gothic architecture style....
 and Willard T. Sears also designed the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum
Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum

The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum or Fenway Court is a museum in the Fenway-Kenmore neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts, Massachusetts located within walking distance of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and near the Back Bay Fens....
.

Trinitychurchboston
  • John Hancock Tower
    John Hancock Tower

    Three different buildings in Boston, Massachusetts, have been known as the "John Hancock Building". All were built by the John Hancock Insurance companies....
     (200 Clarendon Street) (1972), was designed by I. M. Pei
    I. M. Pei

    Ieoh Ming Pei , commonly known by his initials I. M. Pei, is a Pritzker Prize-winning Chinese American American architect, known as the last master of high modernist architecture....
    .


It is a 60 story high dark blue glass tower with a plan in the form of a narrow parallelogram. Admirers assert that it does not diminish the impact of Trinity Church, although its construction did damage the church's foundations. The architect Donlyn Lyndon, who served as head the Department of Architecture at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology during the late 1960s and early 1970s, noted that an early Hancock press release had "the gall to pronounce that 'the building will reflect the architectural character of the neighborhood.'" Lyndon opines that it "may be nihilistic, overbearing, even elegantly rude, but it's not dull."

Other Back Bay buildings

  • Arlington Street Church
    Arlington Street Church (Boston)

    Arlington Street Church is a Unitarian Universalist church located in Boston, Massachusetts. Founded in 1729 as the "Church of the Presbyterian Strangers", it became independent in 1787, taking on a Congregationalist church governance model....
      (Arlington and Boylston Sts), 1861.


It was the first church to be built in the newly-filled Back Bay. Today it serves the Unitarian Universalist congregation. The building's design was inspired by the eighteenth century London church of St. Martin-in-the-Fields. The architect was Arthur Gilman
Arthur Gilman

Arthur Delevan Gilman was an American architect, designer of many Boston neighborhoods, and member of the American Institute of Architects. Gilman was a descendant of Edward Gilman Sr., one of the first settlers of Exeter, New Hampshire....
, who had designed the Back Bay street plan.

  • Berkeley Building (420 Boylston St.) , 1905.


An example of the Beaux-Arts style, it was by the firm of Codman and Despradelle. Constant-Désiré Despradelle was a professor at MIT from 1893 until his untimely death in 1912. The building features a white terra cotta exterior on a steel frame. In 1988 the building was restored by architects Notter Finegold + Alexander.

  • The Stephen L. Brown Building (197 Clarendon St.), designed by Parker, Thomas & Rice, 1922.


It is the first of the three Hancock buildings.

  • The Old John Hancock Building (200 Berkeley Street), 1947.


The second of the three Hancock buildings, it was designed by Cram and Ferguson. From 1947 until 1964 it was the tallest building in Back Bay and second-tallest building in the city, one foot shorter than the Custom House Tower. It is also known now as the Berkeley Building
Berkeley Building

The Berkeley Building is a 36-story, 495-foot structure located at 200 Berkeley Street, Boston, Massachusetts, USA. It is the second of the three John Hancock buildings built in Boston; it was succeeded by the John Hancock Tower....
, but is not to be confused with the real Berkeley Building: see above.

  • Gibson House Museum
    Gibson House Museum

    The Gibson House Museum is a non-profit museum located at 137 Beacon Street in the Back Bay, Boston, Massachusetts.The house was designed by architect Edward Clarke Cabot, and built 1859-60 in the Italian Renaissance style with an exterior of brownstone and red brick....
    , a well-preserved rowhouse, 1860


  • The Colonnade Hotel 1971.
The Colonnade Hotel with its row of columns was built in 1971 by a local developer, Bertram Druker. The luxury hotel joined the first Ritz Carlton Boston to anchor the other side of the Back Bay and ushered in the renaissance of the neighborhood.

  • 111 Huntington Ave 2002.


111 Huntington Avenue is a ., 36-story tower, developed on the southern side of the Prudential Center over the existing sub-surface parking garage and adjacent to an active MBTA subway station. The building is Boston's eighth-tallest building and features a frame dome and crown, a prominent lobby in the Prudential Center, and access to a glass "Wintergarden" and a fully-landscaped park called the South Garden. In 2002, it won the Emporis Skyscraper Award.

  • Saint Clement's Eucharistic Shrine
    Saint Clement's Eucharistic Shrine

    Saint Clement's Eucharistic Shrine is a historic Roman Catholic Shrine#Roman Catholic located on Boylston Street in Back Bay, Boston, Massachussets, Boston, Massachusetts....


A Roman Catholic church designed by Ralph Adams Cram
Ralph Adams Cram

Ralph Adams Cram, , was an United States architect of collegiate and Church buildings, often in the Gothic architecture style....
.

See also

  • Boston By Foot
    Boston By Foot

    Boston By Foot is a non-profit organization offering guided architectural and historical tours of Boston, Massachusetts. Founded in 1976, Boston By Foot offers daily scheduled tours from May through October....
  • Copley Square
    Copley Square

    Copley Square, named for the American portraitist John Singleton Copley , is a Town square located in the Back Bay, Boston neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts, Massachusetts....


External links

  • ;
  • Course notes with illustrations by Professor Jeffrey Howe, Boston College