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Urban College of Boston

1993 establishments in MassachusettsEducational institutions established in 1993Non-profit organizations based in BostonPrivate universities and colleges in MassachusettsUniversities and colleges in Boston
Vague or ambiguous time from December 2015
Urban College of Boston MA
Urban College of Boston MA

Urban College of Boston is a private community college in Boston, Massachusetts. The college offers Associate of Arts degrees and certificate programs in 11 other areas.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Urban College of Boston (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Urban College of Boston
Tremont Street, Boston Beacon Hill

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 42.3529 ° E -71.0642 °
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Address

Robert E. Coard Building

Tremont Street 178,179
02111 Boston, Beacon Hill
Massachusetts, United States
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Urban College of Boston MA
Urban College of Boston MA
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Nearby Places

Boston Young Men's Christian Union
Boston Young Men's Christian Union

The Boston Young Men's Christian Union is an historic building at 48 Boylston Street in Boston, Massachusetts and a liberal Protestant youth association. When Unitarians were excluded from the Boston YMCA (which was evangelical) in 1851, a group of Harvard students founded a Christian discussion group, which was incorporated as the Boston YMCU in 1852. In 1873, the organization decided to construct its own building. $270,000 was raised, and construction on the original segment completed in 1875. The building was designed by Nathaniel Jeremiah Bradlee, constructed in a High Victorian Gothic style, and included ground-level retail. Several additions were made, including in 1956. The building was designated a Boston Landmark by the Boston Landmarks Commission in 1977 and added to the National Historic Register in 1980. Boston YMCU owned Camp Union, a 600-acre (240 ha) camp, in Greenfield, New Hampshire (1929–1993) (now Barbara C. Harris Camp & Convention Center of the Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts). From its renovation in 2003 to 2011 it was called the Boylston Street Athletic Club, and later the Boston Union Gym or BYMCU Athletic Club.The Massachusetts Commission for the Blind moved out in 2012, and the organization began failing financially. In 2016, plans were announced to redevelop the site as 46 units of affordable housing, in partnership with the Planning Office for Urban Affairs of the Archdiocese of Boston.