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Boston Luxury Condos for Sale and Rent

Boston Back Bay condos for sale $2M – $2.5M

Ford Realty Inc., Boston Real Estate for Sale

Ford Realty Inc., Boston Real Estate for Sale

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Boston’s Back Bay neighborhood is considered one of the nation’s most

Back Bay condos for sale $2m – $2.M, Back Ba best preserved examples of 19th

Century urban design, with its elegant Victorian and Century Revival row-houses and tree-lined streets

laid out in a grid system connected to the Boston Public Garden to the east

and the Fens parklands to the west.

Indeed, the Back Bay, like nearby Beacon Hill, is listed on the National

Register of Historic Places and is perhaps Boston’s most European-like

district, with its mix of old residential buildings and ground-level restaurants,

boutiques, art galleries, outdoor cafes and other retail shops running along

the quaint Newbury Street and along the more bustling Boylston Street.

Unlike Beacon Hill, the Back Bay has a strong commercial office-building

component, with the striking Hancock Tower (designed by famed architect

I.M. Pei) in Copley Square and the nearby Prudential Center (and its

scores of shops), and modern multi-family condo and apartment structures

tucked into the historic fabric of the neighborhood. With a population of

about 18,000 residents and tens of thousands of additional workers,

shoppers and tourists streaming through the streets each day, the Back

Bay has more of a true “24/7” feel than its sister-neighborhood Beacon Hill.

Before it became one of the most desirable places to live and work in

Boston, the Back Bay was literally a shallow, marshy bay on the backside

of Boston Harbor and was filled in starting in the mid-1800s, with the

explicit goal of creating a beautiful neighborhood influenced by the design

of Paris.

At the heart of the Back Bay is Copley Square, a handsome brick plaza

surrounded by the Boston Public Library, the Hancock Tower, Trinity

Church, the old Copley Square Hotel (previously a museum and now the

Fairmont Copley), and ground-level retail shops and the Old South Church

along Boylston Street.

To the north, running east and west, is the retail Newbury Street and blocks

of historic residential row-houses along scenic streets such as

Commonwealth Avenue (itself an official park) and Marlborough Street,

considered one of the most handsome residential streets in the nation. To

the very north lies the Charles River, Charles River Esplanade park system and the famous Hatch Shell, where the Boston Pops plays each Fourth of

July.

To the west lies the Prudential Center, the Hynes Auditorium, the Berklee

School of Music, Symphony Hall and the striking First Church of Christ,

Scientist plaza, all flowing into the Fens, home of Northeastern University,

the Museum of Fine Arts and Boston’s Kenmore Square, where the Boston

Rex Sox play at the famed Fenway Park. To the south, Back Bay ends at

approximately Columbus Avenue, where the elegant South End residential

neighborhood begins.

A highly walkable neighborhood, Back Bay is also blessed with excellent

public transit services, including the Green Line subways stations at

Arlington, Copley Square, Prudential Center, Hynes Auditorium, and

Symphony Hall. The Back Bay Station connects to the Orange Line and

MBTA commuter and Amtrak rail stops.

In all, Back Bay is a beloved neighborhood of historic charm and modern

amenities, with thousands of old and new residential units available for

renters and owners alike who want to experience quaint but lively urban

life.

Boston Luxury Condos for Sale and Rent