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    Porter Station is a railroad station in Cambridge, Massachusetts. It is located at the intersection of Massachusetts Avenue and Somerville Avenue (Porter Square). It also serves portions of Somerville. The station opened on December 8, 1984 and is the deepest station in the Boston area. Its facilities include:

      Bicycle parking
      An unusually deep set of escalators (143 feet long)
      Perhaps the best collection of public art on the MBTA system, including ''Glove Cycle'' by Mags Harries, an installation of bronze castings of lost gloves flowing down the escalator and scattered throughout the station.


        Porter (MBTA station)
            Attractions

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    Attractions
      Porter Square Galleria, a small shopping mall, and Porter Exchange, which includes a GAP, City Sports, and the only Japanese food court in Greater Boston. The Porter Exchange building was originally built for Sears and Roebuck, like several other retrofitted commercial spaces in the Boston area, and still features the engraved words "Sears and Roebuck" above the Massachusetts Avenue entrance.

    Note to visitors: The station has no automobile parking. It is inadvisable to park in the nearby shopping center and take the train; they will tow.

      Numerous restaurants and boutique shops along Massachusetts Avenue. Easy access to residential areas along Beacon Street and Somerville Avenue.

    Porter Square Station is wheelchair accessible, with a short high platform at the commuter rail tracks. See MBTA accessibility.




     
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    Scientus.org Dictionary (Yet Another Wiki) RC : 1.39
    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License [copyleft]. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Porter (MBTA station)". link