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Mamaleh s comes to Brookline with crowdfunded restaurant

Bagels and lox and blintzes oh my! Brookline’s deli scene is expanding with the addition of Mamaleh’s Delicatessen, set to open in Washington Square next summer. Mamaleh’s, which first opened in Cambridge’s Kendall Square in 2016, will be located at 1659 Beacon St., a former Dunkin’ located next to The Abbey. The deli plans to open by the end of the summer, and the new location will include outdoor seating and counter service, according to a press release.  Mamaleh’s menu features timeless deli staples such as lox, pastrami, corned beef and pickles, as well as a few traditional options like tongue and chopped liver. On the sweeter side, there are offerings like babka french toast, served with raspberry preserves made in-house. The Brookline location will also have grab-and-go breakfast, lunch and dinner options, according to the press release.

Developer Winstanley bets big on New Haven as a bioscience hub

By Natalie Missakian Developer Carter Winstanley has spent the last 22 years working to build up a life science hub in New Haven. In the beginning, he set a modest benchmark for success. “My original goal was to get 300 George St. leased,” Winstanley says, referencing his transformation of a vacant Southern New England Telephone company building into a high-tech home for Elm City biotechs. Two decades later, 300 George is at capacity, and two subsequent Winstanley bioscience buildings 25 Science Park and 100 College St., home of Alexion Pharmaceuticals are also full. This spring, he plans to kick off construction on a second, $100 million bioscience tower at 101 College St., set to open in 2023, and he is finalizing deals with major tenants.

Another plan to add lab space, this time near Andrew Square

Another plan to add lab space, this time near Andrew Square The mixed-use project, on 9.1 acres, would total 2.5 million square feet By Tim Logan Globe Staff,Updated January 11, 2021, 4:54 p.m. Email to a Friend An artist s rendering of one of the four buildings planned for the Dorchester Avenue project, dubbed On the Dot.Core Investments. A vast lot just north of Andrew Square Station on the Red Line could soon become a mixed-use development anchored by a 15-story lab-and-office building, under plans filed Monday. Core Investments told the Boston Planning & Development Agency that it wants to clean up a 9.1-acre former scrapyard along Dorchester Avenue and put four buildings on the site over several years

Developer buying Fenway s Landmark Center in $1 52b deal

Developer buying Fenway’s Landmark Center in $1.52b deal Alexandria Real Estate Equities plans to continue developing the former Sears complex as a hub for life science companies. By Tim Logan Globe Staff,Updated January 6, 2021, 10:45 a.m. Email to a Friend The Landmark Center in the Fenway neighborhood.Blake Nissen for the Boston Globe The region’s biggest life science real estate developer is making a major move into the Fenway, the latest sign of the region’s hot market for lab space. Alexandria Real Estate Equities disclosed late Tuesday that it has a $1.52 billion deal in place to buy 401 Park — the Landmark Center complex on the corner of Brookline Avenue and Park Drive — and plans to build it out as a life science hub. The site — once a huge Sears warehouse turned into office space — is one of several buildings in the Fenway that are being repositioned to house drug makers, research labs, and other health care-related companies that wa

GoLocalProv | Whitcomb: Taking Long Walks; Stitching Together Downtown; Comforting the Comfortable

  “As Americans get vaccinated, they must decide whether to remember the people who sacrificed to keep stores open and hospitals afloat, the president who lied to them throughout 2020 and consigned them to disaster, the families still grieving, the long-haulers still suffering, the weaknesses of the old normal, and the costs of reaching the new one. They must decide whether to resist the decay of memory….’’   Ed Yong, who writes on science for The Atlantic. He has degrees in zoology and microbiology     The other week I accidentally came upon a TV series on PBS called The Road to Rome, about eight British personalities of varying faiths and nonfaiths, ages and physical conditions walking on the ancient Via Francigena pilgrimage route to the Eternal City. It’s part of a wider series on the network about religious pilgrimages.

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