City staff will discuss the roadwork at Powder House Boulevard and Alewife Brook Parkway, and residents will have a chance to ask questions.
The meeting is being held for those who were not able to attend a Nov. 2 meeting.
The bill would allow the city to seek authorization from the MA Department of Energy Resources to pilot fossil-free construction standards.
The changes are part of the Better Bus Project, the MBTA’s proposal to update the bus system in the Greater Boston area.
The MBTA initially said the slow zones would remain in place roughly one week after the Orange Line reopened in September.
Henry Augustin, 23, died from his injuries after he was transported to Boston Medical Center.
Closures will be in place nightly from Sunday, Sept. 25 to Saturday, Oct. 1 and then from Sunday, Oct. 2, through Friday, Oct. 7.
During the Orange Line shutdown, the MBTA said they were able to complete five years’ worth of necessary work in only 30 days.
Road work will take place along the Route 28 southbound off-ramp to Washington Street from Sept. 22 through Dec. 15
Work will be conducted daily from Monday, Sept. 19, through Monday, Sept. 26, from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m.
As of Friday, work along the Orange Line was about 96 percent complete.
The rally will take place at Seven Hills Park starting at 10 a.m.
During the closures, crews will install pavement markings as part of ongoing pedestrian improvements.
The MBTA said the Union Square branch of the Green Line will reopen on Monday, Sept. 19.
At least 64 new Orange Line cars will be available when service resumes, up from 30 cars when the shutdown first started.
Residents can request a CharlieCard at the front desk during normal business hours, while supplies last.
The Orange Line will close starting Aug. 19 and the Green Line will close from Government Center to Union Square station starting Aug. 22.
Proposed changes include the replacement of Route 39 with T39 and the extension of Route 7.
The meeting will take place on Thursday, June 2 at 6:30 p.m.
The penalty for not complying with street sweeping parking regulations is a $50 fine.
The shorter of the two GLX branches, which runs through the new Lechmere station and Union Square, opened Monday.
The shorter of the two branches, which runs through the new Lechmere station and Union Square, will open in March.
The Traffic Board will hold a public hearing Thursday on the designation of dozens of spots as City Hall or school parking for one year.
MassDOT said it is inspecting an overpass after a piece of concrete reportedly broke off from an I-93 overpass and hit a passing car.
MassDOT said drivers should expect delays in the area of Alewife Brook Parkway and Route 16.
The proposal calls for rebuilding sidewalks, repaving the road and installing additional traffic safety upgrades.
Baker said the GLX will provide "an astonishing amount of opportunity and vitality."
A 33-year-old Somerville man was hospitalized with serious injuries Monday night, state police said.
MBTA officials anticipate that the long-awaited $2.3 billion megaproject will come in under budget.
The project will establish a pedestrian bridge from Draw Seven Park near the Assembly T stop to Encore Boston Harbor.
The opening of the smaller of the two Green Line branches, which adds a single stop to Union Square, has been pushed back three months.
The off-ramp to Mystic Avenue will be closed this weekend, so crews can conduct rehabilitation work on the lower level of the bridge.
Crews will conduct road work to rehabilitate the lower level of the bridge on the off-ramp from I-93 North to Route 38 North.
The Powder House Circle project includes relocating bus stops, reducing traffic to a single lane and creating a pedestrian passage.
The city will use its latest Shared Streets and Spaces grant to install quick-build safety retrofits at the dangerous Powderhouse Rotary.
One of metro Boston's busiest highways is headed to Hollywood.
The project is funded by a Shared Streets and Spaces grant, providing a crucial link for cyclists along the Mystic River.
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