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Franklin Place
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Franklin Place, designed by Charles Bulfinch and built in Boston, Massachusetts, in 1793–95, included a row of sixteen three-story brick townhouses that extended in a 480-foot[1] curve, a small garden, and four double houses. Constructed early in Bulfinch's career, Franklin Place came after he had seen the possibilities of modern architecture in Europe and had determined to reshape his native city.[2] It was the first important urban housing scheme undertaken in the United States,[3] and the city's first row-house complex.[4] However, years of decline and the push of industry into the area forced its demolition in 1858.
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