Building at 30-34 Station Street

The Building at 30–34 Station Street in Brookline, Massachusetts, is a historic mixed-use residential/commercial building. It was designed by architects Winslow & Wetherell with elements of Colonial Revival and Georgian Revival style, and was completed in 1893. It is one of the first examples in Brookline of a mixed-use building. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985.[1]

Building at 30–34 Station Street
Location30–34 Station St., Brookline, Massachusetts
Coordinates42°19′58.7″N 71°7′0.8″W
Arealess than one acre
Built1892 (1892)
ArchitectWinslow & Wetherell
Architectural styleColonial Revival, Georgian Revival
MPSBrookline MRA
NRHP reference No.85003250[1]
Added to NRHPOctober 17, 1985

Description and history

Station Street is a short commercial street in Brookline Village, paralleling the tracks of the MBTA Green Line D branch between Washington and Kent Streets. 30-34 Station Street is on north side, roughly midway on the block and opposite the Brookline Village station. It is a four-story building, built out of brick and covered by a flat roof. The ground floor houses four storefronts articulated by cast iron columns, and the upper floors have eight bays, four of which consist of projecting polygonal bays. It has a deep bracketed cornice, and a band of dentil brickwork between the first and second floors. The building, then as now, housed stores on the first floor and residences above. Since 1974, it has housed Puppet Showplace Theater, the only theater dedicated to the art of puppetry in the Boston area and one of fewer than 50 puppet theaters in the United States. [2]

The building was designed by Winslow & Wetherell, a Boston architectural firm, and completed in 1893 for Arthur Cobb, a Boston merchant and real estate developer. Cobb's other Brookline properties included a stone rowhouse on Walnut Street and a second commercial block with six storefronts on Station Street.

gollark: Well, there are enough robots that the machines keep fed.
gollark: No trains, no belts, no pipes, *everything* went over robots, with no efficient buffer chests and vast quantities of bots flying everywhere for everything.
gollark: A lot of the power consumption was from HBase™, which was heavpoot's insane thing using *entirely* robots.
gollark: Somewhat.
gollark: Originally everything ran off coal/solid fuel, with a few overbuilt solar panels for backup and/or funlolz, but suddenly power draw skyrocketed somehow and I had to start scaling up solar very fast and putting down nuclear.

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References

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