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ARCHIVE: Category Archive for: Legacy

Several New Seaport Restaurants Sign 2-Year Leases – in Shipping Containers

8 shipping container vendors, including several restaurants, at the Seaport’s Innovation and Design Building.

Signs: The Bottom Line

Sign industry resources for sign companies, sign manufacturers, sign suppliers, sign buyers.

Signs of the Time: Why We Spend Big Bucks to Save Old Ads

“The soul of a city lies in its history, and this piece of neon memorabilia we’re going to light tonight helps bring back a part of that history.”Those were the words of then-Minneapolis Mayor Don Fraser right before he threw the switch that lit the iconic Grain Belt Beer sign on Nicollet Island in 1989.

Signs of Italy: A Book Exploring 200 Years of Outdoor Lettering

A visually stunning, comprehensive study of typography and more

12 Behind-the-Scenes Secrets of Airports

There’s an art to signage in an airport. Plus: carpets relax us, and there’s a 60 minute window when we’re likely to spend the most money.

Four Signs That Drive Customers Away

From design to fabrication to installation, we take great pains to ensure that your business gets exactly the sign you envisioned for your business.

Hong Kong Is Losing Its Neon Glow

Source: www.nytimes.com

In decline since the 1990s, the city’s neon signs are being eclipsed by ones made of LEDs, which lack neon’s warmth but are brighter and less expensive to maintain.

No Burglars Allowed: The Worst City Signs

Source: www.theguardian.com

Secret nuclear bunker, next left – and other confusing, flawed and otherwise hilarious city signs

City of Quincy Building Momentum

West of Chestnut, the new Class-A multifamily development in Quincy Center, is just the beginning of a revitalization for the city’s downtown and is helping it earn the “comeback kid” nickname.

A Courtyard View of the Boston Tech Economy

A Courtyard View of the Boston Tech Economy

Source: www.betaboston.com

Most cities would kill for a meeting place as magical as the open brick courtyard behind the Charles Hotel. It’s a simple enough spot: benches and planters, a portal leading to Harvard Square, and two restaurants with patios, Legal Seafoods and Henrietta’s Table.

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