Davis Square

Davis Square is a major intersection in the northwestern section of Somerville, Massachusetts where several streets meet: Holland Street, Dover Street, Day Street, Elm Street, Highland Avenue, and College Avenue.

Contents

Location

The name is often used to refer to the neighborhood surrounding the square, encompassing parts of both Somerville and Cambridge. The Davis Square T station is one of the stops on the Red Line of the MBTA subway. Davis Square is 0.7 miles (1.1 km) from Porter Square, 0.8 miles (1.3 km) from Tufts University, 1.1 miles (1.8 km) from Alewife, 1.7 miles (2.7 km) from Harvard Square, and 1.8 miles (2.9 km) from Union Square.[1] The Somerville Community Path runs through the middle of the square on a former rail line, leading to the popular Minuteman Bikeway.

With so many streets converging, several of which are one-way, Davis Square is infamously difficult to navigate.

Scene

Today, Davis Square is a mix of the old and the new. Restaurants, coffee shops, and stores catering to students and young urban professionals coexist with working class diners and tailors that predate Davis Square's trendy period.

The brick-paved square contains a rich mixture of shops, restaurants, bars, coffee shops, a 1000 seat movie theater complex, a smaller 200 seat live performance theater, and other attractions.

In 1997, Davis Square was listed by the Utne Reader as one of the fifteen "hippest places to live" in the United States.[2]

In 2005, The Boston Globe reported the first million dollar condo sale in Davis Square, which marked a major shift for a neighborhood once known as affordable.[3] It now contains some of the priciest homes in Somerville and is significantly more expensive than the average for eastern Massachusetts.

Arts

Davis Square itself is decorated with many colorful pieces of art, including tiles made by local schoolchildren, sculptures of prominent local figures, the untitled Davis Square statues and a flying cow.

The square also hosts many popular arts institutions and events. The Somerville Arts Council's popular ArtBeat festival takes place here every year on the third weekend of July, while the HONK! Festival of activist brass bands occurs here every October, on Columbus Day weekend. During the summer months there are free public folk dances.[4] The Public Radio International show, Living on Earth is recorded in its studios in Davis Square. For five years, the Jimmy Tingle Off-Broadway Theater boasted a variety of nationally and regionally known acts, both comedic and musical, including Jimmy Tingle himself, but closed at the end of October 2007.[5]

History

Davis Square is named for Person Davis (1819–1894), whose 10-acre (40,000 m2) estate included the present-day Davis Square.[6]

See also

References

Further reading

External links