About Boston
The Back Bay
The Cradle of Liberty
Boston: A College Town
Nightlife
Relaxing in Boston
The Back Bay
The New England College of Optometry is located in Back Bay, one of Boston’s
21 neighborhoods. The college
is steps away from restaurants, movie theatres, and shopping.
Back Bay is in the heart of Boston and it’s an easy hop on the
T to get
to any of the distinctive areas of the city. You can stroll to Beacon Hill and have a
drink at Cheers, eat dinner in the North
End (Boston’s Little Italy), take in a Red Sox game at Fenway Park, shop in
Faneuil Hall Marketplace, or cross the
Charles River to
Harvard Square to study in a coffee house,
or hear the street musicians.
The Cradle of Liberty
Boston is the birthplace of American freedom and boasts many historical landmarks.
Follow a fully costumed guide by foot (or take the trolley tour) on the
Freedom Trail to
visit 16 historical sites, from the
Boston Massacre
to the USS Constitution. Or, take a
harbor
cruise to see the oldest continuously manned lighthouse and hear tales of famous
revolutionary battles. A short distance out of town takes you to
Lexington, where Paul Revere
rode from nearby Concord,
where the first battles were fought.
Boston: A College Town
Boston is truly a college town, with one of the highest concentrations of
colleges
and universities in the world. In fact, at The New England College of Optometry,
you will be among the more than 194,000 students between the ages of 20 and 34
from all over the world, who contribute to the vitality, diversity, and character
of the city.
The city is filled with opportunities to learn. You can attend a seminar at a
nearby college, take skating lessons on
Boston Common’s Frog
Pond, or take a free swing
dance lesson in Faneuil Hall and stick around for a dance.
Nightlife
Experience Boston’s nightlife on Lansdowne Street, where playing pool at
Jillian’s or listening to live music at the
Avalon are popular activities. Or, catch
a show or hear music in a Harvard Square coffee house or even experience a new culture
in Boston’s
Chinatown (the third largest Chinatown in the country).
Relaxation
Boston is called the "Walking City" because of its great walking and
bike paths.
The city is also known for its beautiful open spaces. Stretching from Boston’s
Back Bay to Franklin Park, the 1,000-acre Emerald
Necklace, designed by the architect who designed New York’s Central Park, provides
Bostonians with a bit of nature in the city.
Boston Common,
the oldest park in the history of the U.S., is part of the Emerald Necklace, and
provides students, residents, and visitors with a lush place to walk and relax,
take a ride on the Swan Boats, or play ball in the park.
If you want to venture out of the city, you are an hour from the beaches of Cape
Cod and Rhode Island and an hour or so from New England’s ski areas in New Hampshire
and Vermont.