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Green Street (other)
Green Street or similar terms may refer to: Streets * Green Street, Cambridge, United Kingdom * Green Street, Newham, East London * Green Street, Mayfair, West End of London * Little Green Street, Kentish Town, North London * Green Street, New London, Connecticut, USA Buildings and structures * Green Street (MBTA station), Boston, United States * GreenStreet, a shopping mall and commercial development in Houston, Texas * Green Street bunker, a fort built by the Australian air force in Queensland in World War II * Green Street Courthouse Green Street Courthouse () is a courthouse between Green Street and Halston Street in the Smithfield area of Dublin, Ireland. It was the site of many widely discussed criminal trials from 1797 until 2010, when the Criminal Courts of Justice b ..., a former courthouse in Dublin, Ireland Entertainment * ''Green Street'' (film), a 2005 independent drama film about football hooliganism in England ** '' Green Street 2: Stand Your Ground'', ...
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Green Street, Cambridge
Green Street is a street known for its shops and restaurants in central Cambridge, England. It runs between St John's Street and Trinity Street at the western end and Sidney Street at the eastern end. Opposite the west end is Trinity College and opposite the east end is Sidney Sussex College. The street is probably named after the owner of the land when the first houses were built on the street.Green Street — One of Cambridge's main shopping lanesPocket Cambridge
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Green Street, Newham
Green Street is a road in the London Borough of Newham, East London, which forms much of the boundary between East and West Ham. Green Street is best known for the former Boleyn Ground, home to West Ham United from 1904 to 2016, and for its wide range of shops and market outlets. It was also the site of Green Street House - also known as ''Boleyn Castle'' - for more than 400 years until demolished in 1955. Green Street House was located between the street and the Boleyn Ground. Green Street runs from the originally Roman Romford Road, in the north, to the Barking Road in the south. The junction with Barking Road, by the Boleyn Tavern, was known as ''Morley's Corner'' after the onetime owners of Green Street House. Morley's Corner is the site of the Champions statue commemorating West Ham's players who helped win the 1966 World Cup: Bobby Moore, Geoff Hurst and Martin Peters. Origins and context The first surviving record of the street is from the 15th century, but it is si ...
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Green Street, Mayfair
Green Street is a street in Mayfair, London. It has been built up since the mid-18th century, but most of the current properties date from the late 19th and early 20th century. It has had a number of significant residents, including various members of the British aristocracy, the James Bond author Ian Fleming, and the Beatles. Location The road runs west to east from Park Lane to North Audley Street via Dunraven Street and Park Street, and is part of the Grosvenor Estate. It is presumed to be named after a local builder, John Green, who worked in the area until he was accidentally killed in 1737, when he fell down a well in nearby Upper Grosvenor Street. History Some building had begun on Green Street in the 1720s, but the entire road took some time to fully develop owing to a building slump in the late 1730s and throughout the 1740s, and was not completely built up until the 1760s. Unlike some local streets in Mayfair, it was not initially considered a fashionable or desir ...
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Little Green Street
Little Green Street is an 18th-century street in London, located off Highgate Road in Tufnell Park. Location The street is located in Tufnell Park, part of the London Borough of Camden, and is next to the B518 and the Gospel Oak to Barking train line. It is also on Bus route 88 and route 214, being a short distance from stops on both routes. History The street is diminutive, with only eight houses on one side and two on the other. The houses were built in the 1780s, are Grade II listed, and remain one of the few intact Georgian streets in London. There are records of the small, bow-fronted shops selling ribbons and mousetraps, and previous inhabitants include manual workers such as carpenters. One of the first official mentions of Little Green Street is in the court records of the Old Bailey for 10 July 1805, where Mary Lee, a female servant was fined and sent to the Clerkenwell House of Correction for "simple grand larceny" (theft under 40 s). Almost a century later, in 18 ...
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Green Street, New London
Green Street is a street in New London, Connecticut. It was laid out in 1787 principally through the land of Timothy Green in Downtown New London and is located off State Street and retains its original length and width with a number of buildings within arm's reach of each other. Green Street is intersected by Golden Street (laid out in 1782) and Green's Alley (laid out 1786) as Cross Street. Of the existing "ancient" structures in this area listed in as part of the Downtown New London Historic District is the 1st Richard Douglass House located at 102 Golden Street, the 1801 Richard Douglass House on Green Street, The 1740s "Mistress House" next to the Richard Douglass House and on neighboring Green's Alley the 1789 Reverend West House. After the burning of New London in 1781 by British and Tory forces as part of the Battle of Groton Heights by Gen. Benedict Arnold, Green Street was laid out and contained many houses and small businesses including a bakery, cooperage, and m ...
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Green Street (MBTA Station)
Green Street station (signed as Green) is a rapid transit station in Boston, Massachusetts. It serves the MBTA's Orange Line and is located in the southern part of the Jamaica Plain neighborhood. Green Street is the least-used station on the Orange Line, averaging 3,055 weekday boardings in FY 2019. Like all Orange Line stations, it is fully accessible. History In 1842, the Boston and Providence Railroad (built starting in 1832) began offering service to Jamaica Plain station, located on the site of today's Green Street station; commuter rail service to the station would continue, uninterrupted, for nearly a century. Originally, the station was at ground level, but, starting in 1891, the Old Colony Railroad (which had acquired the B&P in 1888, and was itself acquired in 1893 by the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad) raised the section of its main line through Jamaica Plain (extending from Massachusetts Avenue to the current location of Forest Hills station) onto a 4-t ...
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GreenStreet
GreenStreet, formerly known as Houston Pavilions, is a commercial development in Downtown Houston, Texas, United States. Construction was scheduled to begin in Spring 2006, with the first developments opening in the fourth quarter of 2007. The project possesses an estimated cost of $200 million and is expected to contain almost of space, including of retail space in the first two levels of the development. The project covers three city blocks. As of November 16, 2006, 50% of the retail space had been leased. of loft office space will be available on the mid-block between Fannin and San Jacinto Streets. Office parking will be provided in the Houston Pavilions' 1,675 garage located on the corner of Main and Polk. The project was developed by Texas Real Estate Trust, Inc. and Entertainment Development Group, who also developed the Denver Pavilions in Denver, Colorado. Geoffrey Jones and William Denton served as the co-developers of the project. The designers were Laguarda.Low ...
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