Long Island (Massachusetts) - Buildings and Structures

Buildings and Structures

A comprehensive list of most buildings and structures on Long Island follows.

  • Buildings
    • Former Nike missile facilities (2 buildings - vacant)
    • Department of Environmental Protection and Boston Edison Air Monitoring Stations
    • Farm and greenhouse
    • Laundry building
    • Garage
    • Fire house
    • (Mary) Morris building
    • Curley recreation building (vacant)
    • Tobin building
    • McGillivray building
    • Wards A B C D
    • Richards building
    • Laboratory and morgue (vacant)
    • Incinerator, (behind morgue - vacant)
    • Power house
    • Administration building
    • Nichols building
    • Our Lady of Hope Chapel (unused)
    • Building 6 (vacant)
    • Nurses Building (vacant)
    • Sewage treatment plant
    • Fort Strong power house, incinerator, and tower
    • Long Island Head Light
  • Fortifications
    • Fort Strong: Battery Ward, Battery Hitchcock, Battery Drum, Battery Basinger, Battery Smyth, Battery Taylor, Battery Stevens.
  • Other Structures
    • Viaduct (bridge - not open to public)
    • Pier (not open to public)
    • Civil War monument and cemetery
    • hospital cemetery (3,000)
    • unmarked cemetery
    • water tower
    • MWRA (Massachusetts Water Resources Authority) Shaft
    • Grotto Shrine of Our Lady of Fatima. It was once next to the older demolished original chapel building.

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Famous quotes containing the words buildings and/or structures:

    The American who has been confined, in his own country, to the sight of buildings designed after foreign models, is surprised on entering York Minster or St. Peter’s at Rome, by the feeling that these structures are imitations also,—faint copies of an invisible archetype.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)

    It is clear that all verbal structures with meaning are verbal imitations of that elusive psychological and physiological process known as thought, a process stumbling through emotional entanglements, sudden irrational convictions, involuntary gleams of insight, rationalized prejudices, and blocks of panic and inertia, finally to reach a completely incommunicable intuition.
    Northrop Frye (b. 1912)