Culinary Changes Afoot in the South End

As usual, the restaurant scene in the South End is changing, just as predictably as the seasons. One of the big changes is a new Stephanie’s restaurant taking over the former Tremont Street space of the popular, reasonably-priced Garden of Eden restaurant. A lot of South Enders aren’t thrilled by the change. The Stephanie’s currently located [...]

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Will Foreign Parents Follow their Kids to School?

It’s been a while now that parents have been investing in small condos for children attending a local university in lieu of paying ever-higher dorm costs. But last week, The New York Times noted another phenomenon: more parents are buying second homes in towns where their kids are attending college. And this time, they are doing it [...]

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New in Boston: Bike Paths

We’ve written before about Boston’s great potential as a hardcore biking town. The city is compact, and although there are a few big hills, there aren’t too many steep slopes that can’t be avoided. Yes, it’s true that Boston’s cold weather makes biking impractical (or at least very, very cold) through several months of the year. But [...]

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More International Students This Year at Boston University

This fall, an unprecedented number of foreign freshmen - 444 - will begin classes at Boston University, a 39 percent jump from last year and the largest increase the university has ever seen, reports The Boston Globe.  Foreign students will represent about 11 percent of the freshmen class, compared to the usual average of about [...]

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Are Foreign Buyers Afraid of Boston Real Estate?

Are foreign buyers turning away from Boston real estate?
Nationally, according to a report released last week by the National Association of Realtors , that could be the case. For the 12 months ending May 2008, only 26% of 4,000 American real estate agents surveyed across the country had at least one foreign client. In 2007, in a similar survey, the proportion [...]

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Residential Market May be Soft, but Commercial Firms Up

We normally don’t pay much attention to the commercial side of real estate here at Mondoboston.com. Instead, we’re fascinated with lofts, brownstones, and life in central Boston. But a recent report on the office space market by the brokerage firm Jones Lang La Salle seems worth noting, as it may potentially have repercussions for the downtown housing [...]

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Boston’s Best Coffeehouses, Part 3

Kaara, our coffehouse correspondent recently visited a new cafe in the Brookline area. More cookie than coffee, this new cafe is perfect for those who have a sweet-tooth. Here’s her report on: 
 Tatte Pâtisserie and Café

Recently opened in the St. Mary’s neighborhood of Brookline (right after Kenmore Square on the green C-line trolley),  Tatte Pâtisserie and [...]

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Lofty Aspirations: In Search of a Loft Apartment in Boston

Who hasn’t had the dream of living in a huge open space, with enormous windows, high ceilings, and an open industrial-style kitchen? You would dress in black all the time. Your neighbors would be artists and filmmakers. You would throw lavish parties.
Well, that’s definitely the loft dream but plenty of people are making that dream [...]

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