Alewife MBTA Station: Difference between revisions
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Automated improvements: Critical factual errors identified including wrong city (Cambridge not Boston), likely incorrect opening year (1985 not 1983), nonexistent Red Line extension proposal, and misleading Harvard proximity claim. Article has zero citations, an incomplete final sentence, and omits major recent news (scrapped redevelopment plan). All sections require sourcing; new sections on transit connections, redevelopment history, and station architecture recommended. E-E-A-T quality is... |
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Alewife MBTA Station is a | Alewife MBTA Station is a major transportation hub in Cambridge, Massachusetts, serving as the northwestern terminus of the Red Line of the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA). The station connects Cambridge neighborhoods to Boston's urban core and handles tens of thousands of passenger trips each week.<ref>[https://www.mbta.com/stops/place-alfcl "Alewife Station"], ''MBTA'', accessed 2024.</ref> Its location near the Alewife Brook Parkway and Route 2 makes it a key convergence point for commuters arriving by rail, bus, bicycle, and car. The station opened on March 30, 1985, as the final stop on the Red Line's northwestern extension through Cambridge.<ref>[https://www.mbta.com/stops/place-alfcl "Alewife Station"], ''MBTA'', accessed 2024.</ref> | ||
==History== | ==History== | ||
Alewife MBTA Station | Alewife MBTA Station opened on March 30, 1985, as part of the MBTA's extension of the Red Line through Cambridge. It replaced an earlier terminus at Harvard Square and was designed to draw commuters from Cambridge's northern neighborhoods and the Route 2 corridor. The station was designed by Cambridge Seven Associates, the firm responsible for several other MBTA stations, and it's notable for its large multi-story parking garage, brutalist-influenced concrete structure, and open interior atrium.<ref>[https://www.mbta.com/stops/place-alfcl "Alewife Station"], ''MBTA'', accessed 2024.</ref> At opening, the station included two bus bays, a large park-and-ride facility, and direct pedestrian access to the Alewife Brook Reservation. Functionality drove the design. Comfort was secondary. | ||
As Cambridge's northern neighborhoods grew through the 1990s and 2000s, so did pressure on the station's infrastructure. The MBTA undertook improvements to signage, lighting, and concourse areas during this period to accommodate rising ridership. In 2006 and 2007, the agency rolled out the CharlieCard fare system across its network, including at Alewife, replacing older token-based entry and adding automated fare gates.<ref>[https://www.mbta.com "MBTA CharlieCard System"], ''MBTA'', accessed 2024.</ref> That shift modernized the customer experience at the station substantially. | |||
The station's history has not been without controversy. In 2021, the MBTA pursued plans to redevelop the land around Alewife Station into a mixed-use transit-oriented development, working toward a partnership with private developers. The agency explored the potential of adding housing, retail, and commercial space adjacent to the station to increase density near a major transit node. But in January 2026, the MBTA formally dropped that plan, citing economic headwinds and a failure to reach a viable agreement with developers.<ref>[https://www.bizjournals.com/boston/news/2026/01/13/mbta-drops-station-redevelopment-plan.html "MBTA scraps Alewife station redevelopment plan"], ''Boston Business Journal'', January 13, 2026.</ref> The decision disappointed housing advocates who had seen the site as an opportunity to add units in a transit-rich location. Still, private development in the broader Alewife area has continued independently of the MBTA's plans. | |||
==Geography== | ==Geography== | ||
Alewife MBTA Station | Alewife MBTA Station sits at the northwestern edge of Cambridge, Massachusetts, near the intersection of Route 2 and Alewife Brook Parkway. It's roughly four miles from downtown Boston by rail and lies at the point where Cambridge's dense urban fabric begins to give way to suburban development. The station serves as the Red Line's northern terminus, meaning all inbound trains toward downtown Boston and Braintree originate here. | ||
The | The station's immediate surroundings include a mix of office parks, residential buildings, and natural space. The Alewife Brook Reservation, a 1,100-acre park managed by the Metropolitan District Commission, borders the station to the north and east, offering trails, bird-watching areas, and riparian habitat along the Alewife Brook and the upper Charles River watershed.<ref>[https://www.mass.gov/locations/alewife-brook-reservation "Alewife Brook Reservation"], ''Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation'', accessed 2024.</ref> The reservation's proximity to the station makes it one of the more accessible green spaces in the region for commuters and visitors arriving by transit. | ||
Kendall Square, the dense innovation district anchoring Cambridge's biotech and technology economy, lies roughly two miles southeast of Alewife along the Red Line. Harvard Square is approximately two miles to the south. The station's position at the edge of Cambridge makes it a logical park-and-ride destination for drivers coming off Route 2 from western suburbs who want to avoid driving into Boston. Route 128, the broader circumferential highway, is also accessible from the Route 2 corridor near the station, extending the station's catchment area well into the suburbs. | |||
The area around the station, sometimes called the Alewife Quadrangle, has seen significant commercial and residential development since the 1990s. Healthpeak Properties has been developing a major life sciences and mixed-use campus in the Quadrangle. A pedestrian and bicycle bridge connecting that development to the MBTA station has been a long-discussed element of the project, though construction of the bridge has faced delays.<ref>[https://www.cambridgeday.com/2026/04/21/long-wait-bridge-healthpeak/ "Long wait for a short bridge in Alewife project"], ''Cambridge Day'', April 21, 2026.</ref> The station's integration with surrounding development remains a work in progress. | |||
==Culture== | ==Culture== | ||
The | The station sits at the edge of a neighborhood that has changed quickly. The Alewife area was largely industrial and suburban through most of the 20th century, but the arrival of the Red Line terminus in 1985 helped set in motion a wave of investment and demographic change. Today the area around the station is home to life sciences offices, apartment buildings, and green space, a combination that has attracted a mix of researchers, young professionals, and longtime Cambridge residents. | ||
The | The MBTA has incorporated public art into several of its stations as part of its Art on the Line program, and Alewife has been part of that broader initiative. The station's large interior atrium creates a distinctive civic space compared to many underground stations on the system. It's not flashy. But its scale and natural light give it a character that passengers notice. | ||
The station's role as a terminus means it sees a distinctive mix of users. Park-and-ride commuters from the suburbs, cyclists arriving on the Minuteman Bikeway, students heading to institutions along the Red Line, and workers at the surrounding office parks all pass through the same concourse. That mix of people reflects the station's position at the seam between suburban and urban Cambridge. | |||
==Economy== | ==Economy== | ||
Alewife | Alewife Station's economic significance comes largely from its role as the entry point for commuters traveling from Route 2 suburbs into Cambridge and Boston. The park-and-ride garage attached to the station, which provides several hundred spaces, captures a portion of commuter traffic that might otherwise continue by car into the congested urban core. That diversion has economic value both to individual commuters and to the broader region by reducing traffic on Route 2 and the highways feeding downtown Boston. | ||
The station also anchors a zone of transit-oriented economic development. The Alewife Quadrangle, the cluster of commercial properties immediately surrounding the station, has evolved into a significant node for life sciences and technology tenants. Healthpeak Properties, one of the larger commercial developers in the area, has been building out a mixed-use campus adjacent to the station that includes lab space, office buildings, and ground-floor retail.<ref>[https://www.cambridgeday.com/2026/04/21/long-wait-bridge-healthpeak/ "Long wait for a short bridge in Alewife project"], ''Cambridge Day'', April 21, 2026.</ref> The direct connection between that development and the MBTA station, once the planned pedestrian bridge is complete, is expected to increase foot traffic and the commercial viability of ground-floor businesses in the development. | |||
Real estate values in the Alewife neighborhood have risen substantially since the 1985 station opening, a pattern common to transit-adjacent neighborhoods across the country. The MBTA's now-abandoned plans to develop the station's own land for housing reflected a recognition that the site holds significant economic potential that has not yet been fully realized.<ref>[https://www.bizjournals.com/boston/news/2026/01/13/mbta-drops-station-redevelopment-plan.html "MBTA scraps Alewife station redevelopment plan"], ''Boston Business Journal'', January 13, 2026.</ref> Private developers continue to build in the area regardless, responding to demand for housing and lab space near a Red Line terminus. | |||
==Attractions== | ==Attractions== | ||
Alewife | The Alewife Brook Reservation is the station's most immediate natural attraction. The reservation spans more than 1,100 acres and includes the Alewife Brook, a tributary of the Charles River, along with forested uplands, wetlands, and maintained trails.<ref>[https://www.mass.gov/locations/alewife-brook-reservation "Alewife Brook Reservation"], ''Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation'', accessed 2024.</ref> The Minuteman Bikeway, a 10-mile rail trail running from Cambridge to Bedford, passes near the station and connects it to a much larger network of paths through Arlington, Lexington, and Bedford. Cyclists regularly use the station as a starting or ending point for rides on the trail. | ||
The Fresh Pond Reservation, a 162-acre nature reserve and drinking water supply managed by the City of Cambridge, is also within walking distance of the station.<ref>[https://www.cambridgema.gov/Water/freshpondreservation "Fresh Pond Reservation"], ''City of Cambridge'', accessed 2024.</ref> The reservation includes a 2.25-mile perimeter path popular with walkers and runners. It's a genuinely useful green space, not just a scenic amenity. | |||
For those continuing on the Red Line, the station provides direct access to Cambridge's most significant cultural destinations. Harvard Square, two stops south, is home to Harvard University's main campus, the Harvard Art Museums, and the Harvard Museum of Natural History.<ref>[https://www.harvardartmuseums.org "Harvard Art Museums"], accessed 2024.</ref> Kendall Square, three stops south, connects passengers to the MIT Museum and a dense concentration of technology and biotech companies. Downtown Boston, accessible via transfer or direct Red Line service, includes the Boston Common, the Freedom Trail, and numerous museums and historic sites. | |||
==Getting There== | ==Getting There== | ||
The station is the northwestern terminus of the MBTA Red Line. Trains run from Alewife through downtown Cambridge and Boston, splitting at JFK/UMass Station into two branches: one continuing to Braintree, the other to Ashmont in Dorchester. Service runs from approximately 5:00 a.m. to 12:30 a.m. on weekdays, with reduced hours on weekends.<ref>[https://www.mbta.com/schedules/Red/line "Red Line Schedule"], ''MBTA'', accessed 2024.</ref> | |||
Several MBTA bus routes serve the station, connecting it to neighborhoods in Cambridge, Arlington, and surrounding towns. Route 76 and Route 84 are among the local bus services operating from the station's bus bay, providing connections that the Red Line alone doesn't cover.<ref>[https://www.mbta.com/stops/place-alfcl "Alewife Station Connections"], ''MBTA'', accessed 2024.</ref> Passengers transferring from commuter rail or Amtrak at North Station or South Station can reach Alewife by boarding the Red Line, though a transfer is required at certain points depending on origin. | |||
A large park-and-ride garage is attached to the station, accessible from Alewife Brook Parkway and Route 2. Parking is available on a first-come, first-served basis and can fill on busy weekday mornings. Cyclists are well served: the station has bike racks, MBTA Blue Bike docking stations, and connections to the Minuteman Bikeway and the network of Cambridge bike lanes. The station's elevators and tactile paving meet ADA accessibility standards, and staff are generally present during peak hours. | |||
Passengers traveling from South Station to Alewife don't need a separate fare. A ride on the Silver Line from South Station to South Station/Downtown Crossing, followed by a transfer to the Red Line, counts as a single fare under the MBTA's free transfer policy between Silver Line and rapid transit.<ref>[https://www.mbta.com/fares/transfers "MBTA Fare Transfers"], ''MBTA'', accessed 2024.</ref> | |||
==Neighborhoods== | ==Neighborhoods== | ||
The Alewife neighborhood | The Alewife neighborhood sits at the northwestern edge of Cambridge, bordered by Arlington to the north and west and by other Cambridge neighborhoods to the south and east. It's a younger neighborhood in terms of its built environment. Most of the residential and commercial development dates from the 1980s onward, following the arrival of the Red Line. The neighborhood doesn't have the historic streetscape of Harvard Square or Central Square, but it has grown into a distinct area with its own character. | ||
Housing near the station includes a mix of apartment buildings, condominium complexes, and some older single-family homes on the neighborhood's edges. New construction has accelerated in recent years, particularly in the Alewife Quadrangle and along Concord Avenue, driven by demand from workers at nearby life sciences and technology companies. The neighborhood's population is generally younger and more professionally oriented than some other Cambridge neighborhoods, reflecting its proximity to employment centers along the Red Line. | |||
Cambridge Avenue and Alewife Brook Parkway, the two main commercial corridors near the station, include a mix of local restaurants, fitness centers, and service businesses alongside larger office and lab buildings. The commercial fabric isn't as dense or walkable as Harvard Square. But it functions well as a transit-adjacent mixed-use district. The City of Cambridge's long-range planning efforts have identified the Alewife area as a priority zone for additional housing and improved pedestrian infrastructure in the coming decades.<ref>[https://www.cambridgema.gov/CDD/planninginitiatives/alewife "Alewife Planning Initiative"], ''City of Cambridge Community Development Department'', accessed 2024.</ref> | |||
==Education== | ==Education== | ||
The Alewife neighborhood is | The Alewife neighborhood's relationship with education is shaped by the Red Line's role in connecting the station to Cambridge's major academic institutions. Alewife Station itself isn't adjacent to a university campus. That matters. Harvard University's main campus is centered around Harvard Square, approximately two miles south by rail. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology occupies the Kendall Square area, three stops south of Alewife. Students and faculty at both institutions regularly use the Red Line, often boarding at Alewife if they live in the station's catchment area or arrive by connecting bus or car. | ||
The Cambridge Public Schools system operates several schools in or near the Alewife neighborhood, including the Fletcher-Maynard Academy. The presence of public school families contributes to the neighborhood's residential character and informs local priorities around pedestrian safety and park access near the station. | |||
Latest revision as of 02:35, 1 June 2026
Alewife MBTA Station is a major transportation hub in Cambridge, Massachusetts, serving as the northwestern terminus of the Red Line of the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA). The station connects Cambridge neighborhoods to Boston's urban core and handles tens of thousands of passenger trips each week.[1] Its location near the Alewife Brook Parkway and Route 2 makes it a key convergence point for commuters arriving by rail, bus, bicycle, and car. The station opened on March 30, 1985, as the final stop on the Red Line's northwestern extension through Cambridge.[2]
History
Alewife MBTA Station opened on March 30, 1985, as part of the MBTA's extension of the Red Line through Cambridge. It replaced an earlier terminus at Harvard Square and was designed to draw commuters from Cambridge's northern neighborhoods and the Route 2 corridor. The station was designed by Cambridge Seven Associates, the firm responsible for several other MBTA stations, and it's notable for its large multi-story parking garage, brutalist-influenced concrete structure, and open interior atrium.[3] At opening, the station included two bus bays, a large park-and-ride facility, and direct pedestrian access to the Alewife Brook Reservation. Functionality drove the design. Comfort was secondary.
As Cambridge's northern neighborhoods grew through the 1990s and 2000s, so did pressure on the station's infrastructure. The MBTA undertook improvements to signage, lighting, and concourse areas during this period to accommodate rising ridership. In 2006 and 2007, the agency rolled out the CharlieCard fare system across its network, including at Alewife, replacing older token-based entry and adding automated fare gates.[4] That shift modernized the customer experience at the station substantially.
The station's history has not been without controversy. In 2021, the MBTA pursued plans to redevelop the land around Alewife Station into a mixed-use transit-oriented development, working toward a partnership with private developers. The agency explored the potential of adding housing, retail, and commercial space adjacent to the station to increase density near a major transit node. But in January 2026, the MBTA formally dropped that plan, citing economic headwinds and a failure to reach a viable agreement with developers.[5] The decision disappointed housing advocates who had seen the site as an opportunity to add units in a transit-rich location. Still, private development in the broader Alewife area has continued independently of the MBTA's plans.
Geography
Alewife MBTA Station sits at the northwestern edge of Cambridge, Massachusetts, near the intersection of Route 2 and Alewife Brook Parkway. It's roughly four miles from downtown Boston by rail and lies at the point where Cambridge's dense urban fabric begins to give way to suburban development. The station serves as the Red Line's northern terminus, meaning all inbound trains toward downtown Boston and Braintree originate here.
The station's immediate surroundings include a mix of office parks, residential buildings, and natural space. The Alewife Brook Reservation, a 1,100-acre park managed by the Metropolitan District Commission, borders the station to the north and east, offering trails, bird-watching areas, and riparian habitat along the Alewife Brook and the upper Charles River watershed.[6] The reservation's proximity to the station makes it one of the more accessible green spaces in the region for commuters and visitors arriving by transit.
Kendall Square, the dense innovation district anchoring Cambridge's biotech and technology economy, lies roughly two miles southeast of Alewife along the Red Line. Harvard Square is approximately two miles to the south. The station's position at the edge of Cambridge makes it a logical park-and-ride destination for drivers coming off Route 2 from western suburbs who want to avoid driving into Boston. Route 128, the broader circumferential highway, is also accessible from the Route 2 corridor near the station, extending the station's catchment area well into the suburbs.
The area around the station, sometimes called the Alewife Quadrangle, has seen significant commercial and residential development since the 1990s. Healthpeak Properties has been developing a major life sciences and mixed-use campus in the Quadrangle. A pedestrian and bicycle bridge connecting that development to the MBTA station has been a long-discussed element of the project, though construction of the bridge has faced delays.[7] The station's integration with surrounding development remains a work in progress.
Culture
The station sits at the edge of a neighborhood that has changed quickly. The Alewife area was largely industrial and suburban through most of the 20th century, but the arrival of the Red Line terminus in 1985 helped set in motion a wave of investment and demographic change. Today the area around the station is home to life sciences offices, apartment buildings, and green space, a combination that has attracted a mix of researchers, young professionals, and longtime Cambridge residents.
The MBTA has incorporated public art into several of its stations as part of its Art on the Line program, and Alewife has been part of that broader initiative. The station's large interior atrium creates a distinctive civic space compared to many underground stations on the system. It's not flashy. But its scale and natural light give it a character that passengers notice.
The station's role as a terminus means it sees a distinctive mix of users. Park-and-ride commuters from the suburbs, cyclists arriving on the Minuteman Bikeway, students heading to institutions along the Red Line, and workers at the surrounding office parks all pass through the same concourse. That mix of people reflects the station's position at the seam between suburban and urban Cambridge.
Economy
Alewife Station's economic significance comes largely from its role as the entry point for commuters traveling from Route 2 suburbs into Cambridge and Boston. The park-and-ride garage attached to the station, which provides several hundred spaces, captures a portion of commuter traffic that might otherwise continue by car into the congested urban core. That diversion has economic value both to individual commuters and to the broader region by reducing traffic on Route 2 and the highways feeding downtown Boston.
The station also anchors a zone of transit-oriented economic development. The Alewife Quadrangle, the cluster of commercial properties immediately surrounding the station, has evolved into a significant node for life sciences and technology tenants. Healthpeak Properties, one of the larger commercial developers in the area, has been building out a mixed-use campus adjacent to the station that includes lab space, office buildings, and ground-floor retail.[8] The direct connection between that development and the MBTA station, once the planned pedestrian bridge is complete, is expected to increase foot traffic and the commercial viability of ground-floor businesses in the development.
Real estate values in the Alewife neighborhood have risen substantially since the 1985 station opening, a pattern common to transit-adjacent neighborhoods across the country. The MBTA's now-abandoned plans to develop the station's own land for housing reflected a recognition that the site holds significant economic potential that has not yet been fully realized.[9] Private developers continue to build in the area regardless, responding to demand for housing and lab space near a Red Line terminus.
Attractions
The Alewife Brook Reservation is the station's most immediate natural attraction. The reservation spans more than 1,100 acres and includes the Alewife Brook, a tributary of the Charles River, along with forested uplands, wetlands, and maintained trails.[10] The Minuteman Bikeway, a 10-mile rail trail running from Cambridge to Bedford, passes near the station and connects it to a much larger network of paths through Arlington, Lexington, and Bedford. Cyclists regularly use the station as a starting or ending point for rides on the trail.
The Fresh Pond Reservation, a 162-acre nature reserve and drinking water supply managed by the City of Cambridge, is also within walking distance of the station.[11] The reservation includes a 2.25-mile perimeter path popular with walkers and runners. It's a genuinely useful green space, not just a scenic amenity.
For those continuing on the Red Line, the station provides direct access to Cambridge's most significant cultural destinations. Harvard Square, two stops south, is home to Harvard University's main campus, the Harvard Art Museums, and the Harvard Museum of Natural History.[12] Kendall Square, three stops south, connects passengers to the MIT Museum and a dense concentration of technology and biotech companies. Downtown Boston, accessible via transfer or direct Red Line service, includes the Boston Common, the Freedom Trail, and numerous museums and historic sites.
Getting There
The station is the northwestern terminus of the MBTA Red Line. Trains run from Alewife through downtown Cambridge and Boston, splitting at JFK/UMass Station into two branches: one continuing to Braintree, the other to Ashmont in Dorchester. Service runs from approximately 5:00 a.m. to 12:30 a.m. on weekdays, with reduced hours on weekends.[13]
Several MBTA bus routes serve the station, connecting it to neighborhoods in Cambridge, Arlington, and surrounding towns. Route 76 and Route 84 are among the local bus services operating from the station's bus bay, providing connections that the Red Line alone doesn't cover.[14] Passengers transferring from commuter rail or Amtrak at North Station or South Station can reach Alewife by boarding the Red Line, though a transfer is required at certain points depending on origin.
A large park-and-ride garage is attached to the station, accessible from Alewife Brook Parkway and Route 2. Parking is available on a first-come, first-served basis and can fill on busy weekday mornings. Cyclists are well served: the station has bike racks, MBTA Blue Bike docking stations, and connections to the Minuteman Bikeway and the network of Cambridge bike lanes. The station's elevators and tactile paving meet ADA accessibility standards, and staff are generally present during peak hours.
Passengers traveling from South Station to Alewife don't need a separate fare. A ride on the Silver Line from South Station to South Station/Downtown Crossing, followed by a transfer to the Red Line, counts as a single fare under the MBTA's free transfer policy between Silver Line and rapid transit.[15]
Neighborhoods
The Alewife neighborhood sits at the northwestern edge of Cambridge, bordered by Arlington to the north and west and by other Cambridge neighborhoods to the south and east. It's a younger neighborhood in terms of its built environment. Most of the residential and commercial development dates from the 1980s onward, following the arrival of the Red Line. The neighborhood doesn't have the historic streetscape of Harvard Square or Central Square, but it has grown into a distinct area with its own character.
Housing near the station includes a mix of apartment buildings, condominium complexes, and some older single-family homes on the neighborhood's edges. New construction has accelerated in recent years, particularly in the Alewife Quadrangle and along Concord Avenue, driven by demand from workers at nearby life sciences and technology companies. The neighborhood's population is generally younger and more professionally oriented than some other Cambridge neighborhoods, reflecting its proximity to employment centers along the Red Line.
Cambridge Avenue and Alewife Brook Parkway, the two main commercial corridors near the station, include a mix of local restaurants, fitness centers, and service businesses alongside larger office and lab buildings. The commercial fabric isn't as dense or walkable as Harvard Square. But it functions well as a transit-adjacent mixed-use district. The City of Cambridge's long-range planning efforts have identified the Alewife area as a priority zone for additional housing and improved pedestrian infrastructure in the coming decades.[16]
Education
The Alewife neighborhood's relationship with education is shaped by the Red Line's role in connecting the station to Cambridge's major academic institutions. Alewife Station itself isn't adjacent to a university campus. That matters. Harvard University's main campus is centered around Harvard Square, approximately two miles south by rail. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology occupies the Kendall Square area, three stops south of Alewife. Students and faculty at both institutions regularly use the Red Line, often boarding at Alewife if they live in the station's catchment area or arrive by connecting bus or car.
The Cambridge Public Schools system operates several schools in or near the Alewife neighborhood, including the Fletcher-Maynard Academy. The presence of public school families contributes to the neighborhood's residential character and informs local priorities around pedestrian safety and park access near the station.
- ↑ "Alewife Station", MBTA, accessed 2024.
- ↑ "Alewife Station", MBTA, accessed 2024.
- ↑ "Alewife Station", MBTA, accessed 2024.
- ↑ "MBTA CharlieCard System", MBTA, accessed 2024.
- ↑ "MBTA scraps Alewife station redevelopment plan", Boston Business Journal, January 13, 2026.
- ↑ "Alewife Brook Reservation", Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation, accessed 2024.
- ↑ "Long wait for a short bridge in Alewife project", Cambridge Day, April 21, 2026.
- ↑ "Long wait for a short bridge in Alewife project", Cambridge Day, April 21, 2026.
- ↑ "MBTA scraps Alewife station redevelopment plan", Boston Business Journal, January 13, 2026.
- ↑ "Alewife Brook Reservation", Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation, accessed 2024.
- ↑ "Fresh Pond Reservation", City of Cambridge, accessed 2024.
- ↑ "Harvard Art Museums", accessed 2024.
- ↑ "Red Line Schedule", MBTA, accessed 2024.
- ↑ "Alewife Station Connections", MBTA, accessed 2024.
- ↑ "MBTA Fare Transfers", MBTA, accessed 2024.
- ↑ "Alewife Planning Initiative", City of Cambridge Community Development Department, accessed 2024.