place

Kendall/MIT station

1912 establishments in MassachusettsArts on the LineMassachusetts Institute of Technology student lifeRailway stations in Cambridge, MassachusettsRailway stations in Massachusetts at university and college campuses
Railway stations in the United States opened in 1912Railway stations located underground in MassachusettsRed Line (MBTA) stations
Outbound platform at Kendall MIT station, December 2014
Outbound platform at Kendall MIT station, December 2014

Kendall/MIT station is an underground rapid transit station in Cambridge, Massachusetts. It serves the MBTA Red Line, Located at the intersection of Main Street and Broadway, it is named for the primary areas it serves - the Kendall Square business district and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Opened in March 1912 as part of the original Cambridge subway, Kendall/MIT has two side platforms serving the line's two tracks. The Kendall Band, a public art installation of hand-operated musical sculptures, is located between the tracks in the station with controls located on the platforms. Kendall/MIT station is accessible. With 17,018 weekday boardings by a FY2019 count, Kendall/MIT has the fourth highest ridership among MBTA subway stations.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Kendall/MIT station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Kendall/MIT station
Main Street, Cambridge

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Kendall/MIT stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 42.3623 ° E -71.0862 °
placeShow on map

Address

Kendall/MIT Station

Main Street
02142 Cambridge
Massachusetts, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

Outbound platform at Kendall MIT station, December 2014
Outbound platform at Kendall MIT station, December 2014
Share experience

Nearby Places

Wiesner Building
Wiesner Building

The Wiesner building (Building E15) houses the MIT Media Lab and the List Visual Arts Center and is named in honor of former MIT president Jerome Wiesner and his wife Laya. The building is very box-like, a motif that is consistently repeated in both the interior and exterior design evoking a sense of boxes packed within each other.The building is notable for the level of collaboration between the architect and artists. It stands apart from the surrounding neighborhood with its flat, gridded skin make of white, modular metal panels. The building's exterior was designed by Kenneth Noland is meant as a metaphor of technology through the grids of graph paper and number matrices while also quoting the corridor-like morphology of the rest of the MIT campus. Scott Burton, Alan Shields, and Richard Fleischner also collaborated extensively in the final design of the internal atria and external landscaping.The Wiesner Building in Cambridge, Massachusetts houses the MIT Media Lab, the Center for Bits and Atoms (Neil Gershenfeld's lab), the Department of Architecture's Program in Art, Culture and Technology (ACT, formerly the Visual Arts Program), the Comparative Media Studies (CMS) program and the List Visual Arts Center. It was designed by I.M. Pei & Partners. It is named in honor of former MIT president Jerome Wiesner and his wife Laya and was dedicated in 1985. The Wiesner Building is also known to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology community as Building E15.