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Boston Neighborhood Slogans…Let’s Hear Em!

After the HUGE success of David Bernstein’s Massachusetts Town Slogans hashtag on Twitter (#MATownSlogans), I thought it only appropriate for ONEin3 readers to weigh in on their own slogans for Boston’s many neighborhoods – officially recognized or not.  So, join the conversation at #BosHoodSlogans.  Don’t have Twitter? Post in the comments below.

Here’s one or two for each to get the conversation going:

-          East Boston – Free to enter… $3.50 to leave.

-          South Boston – If you’re Irish, you’re family. Wait, you probably already were family.

-          South End – Giving Boston its sense of style since 1728.

-          Beacon Hill – You’re welcome for Patriot’s Day. And Bunker Hill Day. And Evacuation Day.

-          Fenway/Kenmore – New England’s heart and soul since 1903.

-          Bay Village – Where? Oh. I thought that was (South End/Back Bay/Theatre District/Chinatown)

-          Chinatown – Yum!

-          Financial District – All of the jobs, none of the T route.

-          Downtown Crossing – Secretly hoping we don’t fall in the Filene’s pit since 2007.

-          Back Bay – See, you CAN trick wealthy people into living on landfill!

-          West Roxbury – No matter how much we make, you still confuse us with Roxbury.

-          Mattapan – Native American for ‘A Good Place to Be’

-          Hyde Park – Our golf course is named after a Cincinnati Reds player. Wait, what?

-          Mission Hill – Trendy when called ‘The Hill.’ Not-so-trendy when you realize it’s not Beacon Hill.

-          Allston/Brighton – In by 22, out by 24.

-          West End – If you lived here, you’d be home by now. You’re not home yet.

-          Charlestown – HEY! That flower shop in The Town is NOT in Charlestown!

-          JP – Come to visit the Sam Brewery, but leave before building a Whole Foods!

-          Dorchester – See Southie.

-          Roslindale – Sorry, Dot, but Rozzie is the best nickname in town.

-          Roxbury – We have a zoo!

-          North End – Testing how much people will pay to live in a closet that smells like Italian food.

-          Bay Village – Boston’s smallest officially recognized neighborhood. Yes, its actual official! No, I’m not lying.

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Winter of our DiscontenT

I’m sick of the snow.

I’m sick of walking in it.  I’m sick of dressing for it.  I’m sick of talking about how much of it there is.  I’m sick of feeling bad for public school kids who could lose their April vacations because of it.  Strangely, I’m not sick of cleaning off my car, but that’s probably because I live in a totally walkable city that also has public transportation.

I’ve got some theories about Blizzard of ’78 post-traumatic stress disorder — specifically, that if you were an adult in ’78 and were snowed in somewhere is directly proportional to the number of phone calls you make to people who weren’t around in ’78 to warn them of an impending storm and the needs for bread, milk, and eggs.  I’m looking at you, Harvey Leonard.  (And my mother.  Seriously, I live right next to a convenience store and a Starbucks.  I won’t perish in a snowstorm just because I have an empty fridge.)

2011 isn’t about that one big storm, though.  At least, not yet.  Or at all.  I hope.  2011 is the year of the never-ending storms, one after another, that make it impossible to ever REALLY clear your driveway or plow your street or wear normal shoes to work instead of snowboots.

For Boston commuters, though, 2011 is the year that they finally lost patience with the MBTA.

Full disclosure: I don’t have to take the T to work — I live one mile from my office.  But I’ve been on Twitter.  I hear (read) your cries.  Every morning, it’s the same darn thing.  Your bus is late.  Your train is delayed.  Your train is stuck.  There’s a fire at DTX.  You’re late for work.  Again.

It’s frustrating, I’m sure.  I’m not going to defend the MBTA here, beyond pointing out that 1) it isn’t JUST the MBTA getting messed up — when you were getting bused from Riverside to Kenmore last week, the MetroNorth was cancelled or stuck with open doors; 2) Richard Davey’s team has some serious twitter skills; and 3) Davey said “I’m sorry,” which was cool of him.  But enough defending.

Instead, I want to try to be a little more positive.  What do we LOVE about the MBTA?

Here; I’ll start.

I love the view from Charles/MGH to Kendall.

I love that the Silver Line is a line, and not a bus route, even though it’s a bus.

I love explaining Inbound/Outbound to out-of-towners.

I have a friend who loves the voice of the woman on the Blue Line who does her announcements with a “gooood morning” in a Maine-like accent.

I love when Paul Pierce tells me courtesy counts (and that’s the truth).

None of this made your commutes any less frustrating, but I just wanted to acknowledge that it isn’t all bad.  Just mostly bad.  What do you love about the T?  What’s your favorite T station, for either the location and the station itself?  Who is your favorite personali-T*?  Tell us in the comments, tweet at us, share it on Facebook.  We want to hear from you!

*Stole that from a friend; it could mean bus driver, train conductor, T stop regular, or celeb spokesperson.  Whatever works for you!

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The Planner’s Perspective

Buildings, benches, and forks in the road symbolize a series of decisions and shape pedestrian patterns and behaviors. Taking a moment to appreciate Boston’s built environment will lead to enhanced pride for our fair city, and your observations and narration will delight your friends (at least those with an arm chair interest in urban design and who have grown accustomed to journeys with you taking just a little bit longer). Oh, to be an urban planner whose purposeful missions are peppered with stops to peek down alleys and critique the skyline!

Boston’s architectural mix and walkability make the city a playground for aesthetes and history buffs. A casual stroll through Boston’s downtown business district offers over 300 years of perspective on planning and design, but how do we, today, move and react as players in our ever-evolving urban context?

• Relax on a bench in one of a handful of brick oases near City Hall (no, not that brick oasis) uncut by roads and preserved by walls of low- to mid-rise brick buildings.
• Hearken back to the time when shopping on a grand boulevard was a family affair, and move with the tide in the Downtown Crossing pedestrian mall that once hosted trolley traffic as well:


• Find a shaded nook within the curves and hilliness of Boston Common. Veer from the pedestrian walkways connecting Back Bay with Downtown, Beacon Hill, and other neighborhoods, and claim your own swath of green space.

Next time you breeze past a building or search for a private place to sit down with your lunch, pause to look for contextual historical clues. Faded lettering on a store’s façade and obsolete trolley tracks offer glimpses of Boston’s past and make the process of arriving at a destination more enriching (and provide limitless Google image search fodder for the curious!). Just think: as we use our thoughtfully prepared urban environment, we contribute to the next wave of transformation.

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The Swapaholics Are Coming to Downtown Crossing!

Hey all you stylin’ yet frugal ONEin3ers, we have the perfect event for you.

On November 18th, our friends at Swapaholics will be posted up at 24 Bromfield Street doing some serious swapping to get the holiday shopping season started right. And afterward, head to Silvertone to join our other good friends from The Second Glass for a good winey time.

Some highlights:

Bring a Bag, Get a Bag:
Bring a bag full of all those like-new and gently worn clothes, shoes, accessories, and jewelry just taking up space in your closet and trade them in for a new bag full of fashionable finds from your fellow stylish Bostonians — all for just the cost of admission!

Get a Head Start on Holiday Bargain Shopping:
Grab exclusive discounts from Downtown Crossing shops & restaurants a week before the holiday sale season!

Show Off Your Swap Style:
Take pictures with your friends and all your new favorite scores in our Swap.com Style Photo Booth. Post them to Facebook or Twitter with the hashtag #DTXSwap to @Swap or @TheSwapaholics, or both!

Feel Good & Do Good:
$1 from every ticket goes to support Project Place, plus all the clothing left over at the end of the swap will be donated to Goodwill Boston!

Keep the Swap Party Going!
Join Swap.com, The Swapaholics & our friends at Second Glass at Silvertone across the street post-swap for sipping, noshing, and sharing swap stories!

Date: Thursday, November 18th

Time:

  • Clothing drop-off: Noon-6:30 p.m.
  • Swap: 7 to 8 p.m.
  • After-party at Silvertone: 9 to 10:30 p.m.

Location: 24 Bromfield Street, Downtown Crossing

REGISTER HERE

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