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Four Seasons Hotel & Private Residences, One Dalton Street

Boston building and structure stubsFour Seasons hotels and resortsHotel buildings completed in 2019Pages with non-numeric formatnum argumentsResidential buildings completed in 2019
Residential skyscrapers in BostonSkyscraper hotels in Boston
One Dalton, December 2018
One Dalton, December 2018

The Four Seasons Hotel & Private Residences, One Dalton Street is a 850,000 sq ft (79,000 m2) skyscraper in Boston, Massachusetts. It is the third tallest building in Boston, the tallest residential building in New England, and the tallest building constructed in the city since Hancock Place in 1976. It is located in the Back Bay neighborhood, not far from 200 Clarendon Street and the Prudential Tower, the two tallest skyscrapers in Boston.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Four Seasons Hotel & Private Residences, One Dalton Street (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Four Seasons Hotel & Private Residences, One Dalton Street
Dalton Street, Boston Fenway / Kenmore

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Wikipedia: Four Seasons Hotel & Private Residences, One Dalton StreetContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 42.34575 ° E -71.083944444444 °
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Address

Four Seasons Hotel One Dalton

Dalton Street 1
02115 Boston, Fenway / Kenmore
Massachusetts, United States
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Phone number

call+16173774888

Website
onedalton.com

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One Dalton, December 2018
One Dalton, December 2018
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Nearby Places

WWBX
WWBX

WWBX (104.1 FM, Mix 104.1) is a radio station with a hot adult contemporary format in Boston, Massachusetts. The format started at 98.5 FM on February 9, 1991, and moved to 104.1 FM, replacing WBCN on August 12, 2009, to allow for the launch of WBZ-FM at 98.5 the next day. Its studios are located in Brighton, and its transmitter is on the upper FM mast of the Prudential Tower. From February 26, 1991, to December 3, 2017, the "Mix" format in Boston used the callsign WBMX. On December 4, 2017, the call letters changed to WWBX, after the call letters were transferred to a sister station in Chicago.The 104.1 MHz facility went on the air in 1958 as WBCN. A classical music station in its first ten years on the air, beginning in 1968, WBCN featured a rock format for 41 years. Known as "The Rock of Boston", WBCN became a legend in the rock music industry for breaking many bands, most notably U2. WBCN was a modern rock/active rock station that mixed music that has been popular in the modern rock, alternative rock and classic rock genres. WBCN switched to digital only on August 12, 2009, with two digital-only automated streams, one on the HD2 channel of WBZ-FM continuing the modern rock format, the other Free Form BCN, airing an eclectic mix of rock, related genres, and a lot of new music - essentially the WBCN of 1968 to 1988, brought into the 21st century. The station's battle of the bands' competition, the Rock 'n' Roll Rumble, survived the station's demise. WBCN's celebrated local music specialty show, Boston Emissions—along with The Rumble—moved to former sister station WZLX, now owned by iHeartMedia, in 2009. Boston DJ Anngelle Wood remains the host and music director of both the radio show and The Rumble—these are the last remaining ties to the original 104.1 WBCN programming."Free Form BCN" began airing live freeform shows in September 2009 on WZLX-HD3 and at wbcn.com. While still digital and largely automated, the online stream was live Monday through Friday during the day. WBCN's first rock program director, Sam Kopper, was Program Director of WBCN Free Form Rock until the channel was discontinued on January 29, 2016.