The 100 Best Buildings in Boston

Behold the city’s architectural treasuresaccording to us.


Edited by Madeline Bilis, with Ellen Gerst, Simone Migliori, and Jules Struck


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rutalism. Beaux Arts. Victorian. Colonial Revival. Boston isn’t lacking in the interesting-looking building department. While there are loads of old structures—and tons of new ones springing up—not all of them are, you know, good. For that reason, and the fact that the city isn’t known for its dazzling architecture, we’ve compiled a list of the 100 best buildings here.

The ranking, of course, is wholly subjective and highly opinionated. We love Brutalism, so what? And yes, there are quite a few old white male architects represented. This is Boston, after all. But we hope everyone will be able to spot a few of their personal favorites in here, from iconic designs, to well-known architects, to neighborhood landmarks, and more.

We ranked the buildings—with a few choices in Cambridge, for good measure—with several factors in mind, such as architectural prestige, design, historical significance, and plain old coolness.

Look over our list and tell us what you think. Arguing is encouraged.


Photo by Eric Clark

100. Massachusetts Historical Society Building
1154 Boylston St., Boston
Year completed: 1899
Architect: Edmund March Wheelwright

It’s only fitting that the oldest historical society in the United States would have a nearly 120-year-old home. The Massachusetts Historical Society, founded in 1791, had its headquarters modeled in the Colonial Revival style. The bow front exterior, Doric columns, and washed-out color of its yellow Roman brick gives this historical structure in the Fenway stately curb appeal.

Photo by Eric Clark

99. Boston Fire Department, Engine 22
700 Tremont St., Boston
Year completed: 1960
Architect: Unknown

The low-slung, overhanging roof and midcentury modern style of this fire station makes it a conspicuous feature on Tremont Street, near the South End branch of the Boston Public Library. Two plaques installed on the outside of the station commemorate the lives of five soldiers who died in the line of duty during the 1972 Vendome Hotel Fire.

Photo by Simone Migliori

98. R.H. Stearns Building
140 Tremont St., Boston
Year Completed: 1909
Architect: Parker, Thomas & Rice

Tall and neat, the Beaux Arts-style R. H. Stearns building hints at a bustling interior full of office dwellers poring over spreadsheets. In fact, it used to be a department store and offices, though these days it serves the purpose of housing for the elderly.

Photo by Eric Clark

97. Simmons Hall
229 Vassar St., Cambridge
Year Completed: 2002
Architect: Steven Holl Architects

MIT’s Simmons Hall is a Cubist’s dream. The huge geometric masterpiece comes to life at night with the steady blinking of some 5,500 windows, almost like a huge computer modem. The architect’s idea was to create more of a living, breathing structure, however. He wanted a porous design to allow for light filtration all throughout the mammoth structure.

Photo by Madeline Bilis

96. Art Deco Dunkin’ Donuts
230 Congress St., Boston
Year Completed: 1930
Architect: Stone & Webster Engineering Co.

Built as a Western Union outpost in 1930, this Art Deco structure is now home to a très fancy Dunkin’ Donuts with polished marble and geometric ornamentation. (This Dunkin’s is so good, it’s worthy of a love letter.) Its exterior takes design cues from Egyptian and Mayan art, Cubism, Fauvism, and Expressionism. Just look at that chevron motif.

Photo by Jules Struck

95. One International Place
100 Oliver St., Boston
Year completed: 1987
Architect: Johnson/Burgee Architects

Famous from being etched onto hundreds of mugs, t-shirts, and art prints of the Boston skyline, One International Place (all 46 floors of it) towers over the Financial District. Its rounded modern facade means more windowed offices inside and an impressive neck-stretching height on the outside.

Photo via Wikimedia/Creative Commons

94. Boston Architectural College
320 Newbury St., Boston
Year completed: 1966
Architect: Ashley, Myer & Associates

Although its backside resembles a classical building topped with a dome, the Boston Architectural College really lives inside a concrete-and-glass structure. The domed appearance actually comes from a deceptively detailed mural that was added almost 10 years after construction. Its Newbury Street side, however, is rectangular, large-windowed, and a welcome Brutalist break in Back Bay.

Photo by Alex Lau

93. MassArt Treehouse
578 Huntington Ave., Boston
Year completed: 2012
Architect: ADD Inc.

For a primarily commuter college, building a residential hall marked a period of major growth at Massachusetts College of Art and Design. Its Treehouse residence hall appropriately fuses growth and art into one structure. Inspired by Gustav Klimt’s Tree of Life, the building’s exterior boasts a comparable mosaic design out of staggered aluminum panels. A dark-colored base gradually lightens toward the top into the same shade of tan Klimt used on the bark of his tree. “I find the design so optimistic, colorful, and refreshing,” says the design team’s leader, Tamara Roy.

Photo by Jules Struck

92. The Cyclorama at Boston Center for the Arts
539 Tremont St., Boston
Year Completed: 1884
Architect: Charles Cummings, Willard Sears

The South End’s rounded Cyclorama was built to house a 400-foot circular painting of The Battle of Gettysburg, but the Classical Revival-Victorian exterior shouldn’t be overlooked. Its pleasingly symmetrical dome is bordered by high turrets and sports classically beautiful brick work.

Photo via Google Maps

91. Madison Park High School
75 Malcolm X Blvd., Roxbury
Year completed: 1977
Architect: Marcel Breuer and Tician Papachristou

It’s the only Marcel Breuer-designed building in city limits, and it’s severely underappreciated. Madison Park High School is a series of concrete-faced structures that, like City Hall, resemble honeycombs. “The interconnected buildings house some of the most outstanding facilities of any high school in the country,” write Susan and Michael Southworth in their 1984 AIA Guide to Boston. The gymnasium alone contains three pools and a rowing tank.

Photo by Simone Migliori

90. Old South Meeting House
310 Washington St., Boston
Year completed: 1729
Architect: Robert Twelves

If the founding fathers returned to Boston today, they wouldn’t recognize most of it. But they could still probably find their bearings based on the Old South Meeting House’s iconic white steeple. Famously the site where the Boston Tea Party was organized, it now sits among the shiny new office buildings and 7-Elevens of Downtown Crossing, but the red brick and green oxidized copper ensure it holds its own.

Photo by Margaret Burdge

89. New England Aquarium
1 Central Wharf, Boston
Year completed: 1969
Architect: Cambridge Seven Associates

The New England Aquarium is wonderfully Brutalist both inside and out, which makes sense, since the building was designed from the inside out. Dreamed up by aquarium specialist Peter Chermayeff, a founding partner of Cambridge Seven Associates, the concrete structure was built around a one-way visitor path that makes its way through a dark atrium space. According to Peter Chermayeff LLC, the visitor experience switches between large and small, dark and light, and wet and dry, and is anchored by a central cylindrical tank.

Photo by Eric Clark

88. Mercantile Wharf Building
33-81 Mercantile St., Boston
Year completed: 1856
Architect: Gridley James Fox Bryant

Back when Quincy Market used to border the Boston waterfront, the Mercantile Wharf building served as a storage warehouse, which explains its rough Boston granite exterior and imposing length and width. A cornice trims the length of the building on top, while the bottom level traces a series of arched entrances in groups of three. After a fire ripped up the interior of the building in the ‘70s, the bottom level was converted into neighborhood businesses, the upper floors into apartment units.

Photo by Simone Migliori

87. Ames Building
1 Court St., Boston
Year completed: 1889
Architect: Shepley, Ryan, and Coolidge

One of Boston’s earliest skyscrapers doesn’t seem so tall anymore, but its Romanesque style has stood the test of time. The closer you look, the more ornate details you can spot, from the carved doorways to the extremely detailed overhang all the way at the tippity top.

Photo by Jeff Gunn on Flickr/Creative Commons

86. The Liberty Hotel
215 Charles St., Boston
Year Completed: 1851
Architect: Gridley James Fox Bryant

This posh hotel used to be the Charles Street Jail until 1990 when it was closed due to overcrowding. The beautiful building is all swank and luxury now, though the hard symmetry of the exterior still manages to remind us of something more custodial than ostentatious.

Photo by Simone Migliori

85. Proctor Building
100-106 Bedford St., Boston
Year Completed: 1897
Architect: Winslow and Wetherell

The stout and regal Proctor Building wears its oxidized copper cornice like a crown. It is an art piece from the 1890s that has remained an uncommon ode to the Spanish Renaissance style as newer, taller buildings crop up around it.

Photo by Ellen Gerst

84. Abiel Smith School
46 Joy St., Boston
Year completed: 1835
Architect: Richard Upjohn

The Abiel Smith School, located in a brick schoolhouse in Beacon Hill, was the first publicly funded school for African American children in the U.S. The traditional structure became the site of Boston’s fight for educational equality, and it wasn’t until 1855 that the American flag hanging from the protruding pole on the school’s facade stood for the kids inside, too.

Photo by Mr. Littlehand on Flickr/Creative Commons

83. Longfellow House
105 Brattle St., Cambridge
Year completed: 1759
Architect: Major John Vassall

This quaint Georgian mansion near Harvard Square was utilized by George Washington as a headquarters during the Siege of Boston, and later, poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow called the mansion home for most of his life. The pastel-colored abode is simply constructed with two-story columns and a center pediment, creating a gorgeous contrast with the lush lawns that surround it.

Photo by Simone Migliori

82. Batterymarch Building
54-66 Batterymarch St., Boston
Year Completed: 1928
Architect: Harold Field Kellogg

The Batterymarch Building went up in 1928, and though it no longer towers over its neighbors, this rosy skyscraper is still a striking example of Art Deco flair.

Photo via Wikimedia/Creative Commons

81. Winthrop Building
276-278 Washington St., Boston
Year completed: 1893
Architect: Clarence H. Blackall

For Boston’s first wholly steel-framed structure, the Winthrop is surprisingly vintage in appearance. Its egg-and-tongue molding, Renaissance Revival style, and dark green and red brick facade stand out next to the cool gray granite of its neighbors. The Winthrop was originally dubbed the Carter Building, but was later renamed after Governor John Winthrop because he once owned a home right next to it.

Photo by Jules Struck

80. Pine Street Inn
444 Harrison Ave., Boston
Year completed: 1894
Architect: Edmund March Wheelwright

Created in the fortress style of Florence’s Palazzo Vecchio (and appearing strikingly similar to Provincetown’s Pilgrim Monument), the Pine Street Inn originated as a headquarters for the Boston Fire Department. The firefighters’ need for a lookout tower explains how the architects managed to skirt the former 125-foot height limit for Boston buildings. The tower itself, which dominates the structure, is made up of yellow brick, evoking the image of a medieval battlement. By 1969, the building had changed its use dramatically. Now, it is owned and operated by the Pine Street Inn, a homeless shelter and social services center.

Photo by Eric Clark

79. Tremont Temple
76 Tremont St., Boston
Year completed: 1896
Architect: Clarence H. Blackall

Standing curbside and peering upward at the flat face of the Tremont temple has a dizzying effect, a result of its enormity and the Venetian-style diamond-patterned stonework. In the late 1800s, the Free Church Baptists of Boston needed an improved space for their free and accessible congregations—and prolific architect Clarence Blackall delivered. The temple’s magnificence has been widely recognized in its history—the likes of Daniel Webster and Jenny Lind have visited for speeches and performances.

Photo by Eric Clark

78. Filene’s
426 Washington St., Boston
Year completed: 1912
Architect: Daniel Burnham & Company

Before Macy’s took over the department store empire, there was a different chain in town. Filene’s, named after its founder William Filene, opened in 1881, and quickly dominated retail across New England and New York in the 1900s. Renowned Midwestern architect Daniel Burnham was tasked with building a flagship store worthy of the rapidly growing Filene’s brand. He modeled the store in the Beaux Arts style with gray and green terracotta finishes on the facade, the last aspect of the original building that still stands under the protection of the Boston Landmarks Commission. Today, the inside of what is now widely referred to as the “Burnham Building” hosts office spaces as well as modern department store chains.

Photo by Madeline Bilis

77. 75 Federal
75 Federal St., Boston
Year Completed: 1930
Architect: Thomas James

As it was built on the tail end of the Roaring 20s, this skyscraper reflects the Art Deco tastes of the period. It’s adorned with bronze panels depicting the fields of finance, architecture and sculpture, agriculture, power, and transportation. Other panels show a carpenter, a stonemason, and a blacksmith. Before the building was constructed, the house of the first Roman Catholic Bishop of Boston, Jean Lefebvre Decheverus, stood at the spot.

76. Old North Church
193 Salem St., Boston
Year completed: 1723
Architect: William Price

One if by land, two and a half feet of bricks make up the walls of the Old North Church, where legend says Paul Revere held up two lanterns before rushing out on his midnight ride to meet the British, coming in from the sea. The church’s tall white steeple sticks out among the brick-laden North End, though its Georgian architecture is right at home.

Photo via Wikimedia/Creative Commons

75. Interdisciplinary Science & Engineering Complex at Northeastern University
805 Columbus Ave., Boston
Year completed: 2017
Architect: Payette

Quietly and without fanfare, Northeastern University has risen in the college rankings over the past ten years, going from a New England university into an international hub of innovation and research. Its campus buildings have grown along with it. In 2017, the towering glass Science and Engineering Complex was completed, featuring a wide central atrium that extends upward through all six floors of the building. The architects worked closely with the Northeastern administration to create a building that honored transparency and exuded an energy and movement. Throughout the building, views of research spaces remain unobstructed through the use of glazed walls, offering anyone a peep in on what STEM students are up to in the laboratories.

Photo by Simone Migliori

74. Clafin Building
20 Beacon St., Boston
Year completed: 1884
Architect: William Gibbons Preston

When you say “prime real estate” in Boston, you mean the Clafin Building. Steps away from the State House and the Common, the former Boston University building (now home to some of the most expensive apartments in the city) combines arches and carved brownstone with striking copper bay windows.

Photo by Ellen Gerst

73. The Landmark Center
401 Park Dr., Boston
Year Completed: 1929
Architect: George C. Nimmons

This Art Deco structure looks like the hybrid of some moat-enclosed castle from the British countryside and the Chrysler building in New York. An unconventional combination, but it works. The building was first used as the Sears, Roebuck and Co. mail order store, and remains one of the best and largest examples of Art Deco architecture in the city.

Photo by Simone Migliori

72. YMCA of Greater Boston, Huntington Avenue Branch
316 Huntington Ave., Boston
Year Completed: 1911
Architect: Shepley, Rutan, and Coolidge

The Huntington YMCA is neat, rectangular, and perhaps best appreciated by Neoclassical architecture buffs. Though the rest of us might not find the subtle stateliness exceptional, the building’s history is certainly noteworthy–President William Taft laid the cornerstone in 1912 of the organization’s flagship building.

Photo by Eric Clark

71. Cathedral of the Holy Cross
1400 Washington St., Boston
Year completed: 1875
Architect: Patrick C. Keeley

In the late 19th century, the South End’s large population of Irish Catholics was in need of a place of worship, and someone decided that the spot of the former town gallows would do quite nicely. The Cathedral of the Holy Cross, built in the Gothic Revival style with Roxbury puddingstone and limestone trim, became the largest Roman Catholic church in New England—as large as London’s famous Westminster Abbey.

Photo by Eric Clark

70. Boston Fire Department, Engine 33, Ladder 15
941-955 Boylston St., Boston
Year completed: 1887
Architect: Arthur H. Vinal

With a burnished brick facade and a Richardsonian Romanesque twin rooftop design, this vintage fire station—the first to house a ladder truck in Boston—is still active. Boston Fire Department Engine Company 33 and Ladder Company 15 take up half of it. Boston Architectural College purchased the other half in 2007. An enclosed courtyard that bridges the two buildings connects the twin rooftops. Back in the day, the courtyard contained shared stables for the fire and police horses.

Photo by Ed Lyons on Flickr/Creative Commons

69. James Blake House
735 Columbia Rd., Dorchester
Year completed: 1661
Architect: James Blake

English immigrant and minister James Blake settled in the town of Dorchester in the 1630s. Soon afterward, he met his wife Elizabeth Clap. Allegedly, this modest house was built in preparation for their marriage. As the oldest house in Boston, the James Blake House certainly gets a lot of attention (and tour groups). Though simple and unassuming, and built in the rustic Western English style of his time, Blake’s family home is distinguished for its history and age, and the dedicated preservation efforts of the Dorchester Historical Society.

Photo by Eric Clark

68. The International Trust Company Building
45 Milk St., Boston
Year completed: 1893, enlarged in 1906
Architect: William Gibbons Preston, enlarged by Woodbury & Leighton

This building, plunked in the heart of downtown Boston, is an early example of the now widely used construction technique known as “skeleton framing,” where an interior skeleton comprised of the primary building material is fashioned before the rest of the structure goes up. Originally built as the home office for the Old Colony Trust Company division of the Bank of Boston, this elaborately designed Beaux Arts office space had anthropomorphic figures carved into it by the 19th-century stone carver Max Bachman. The figures, which represent Commerce, Industry, Security, and Fidelity, linger between the windows of the second floor.

Photo by Margaret Burdge

67. Ray and Maria Stata Center
32 Vassar St., Cambridge
Year completed: 2004
Architect: Frank Gehry

The Stata Center was the looney brainchild of Frank Gehry, one of the most prominent contemporary architects of our time (think Guggenheim Museum in Spain or Dancing House in Prague). The center serves as a science building on MIT’s campus, presumably in the hopes that the cartoonish Deconstructivist design inspires students to think unconventionally.

Photo courtesy of Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage

66. The Lucas
140 Shawmut Ave., Boston
Year completed: 1874, converted in 2017
Architect: Finegold Alexander Architects

In 2017, the 19th-century Holy Trinity German Catholic Church’s former congregation space was completely transformed into luxury condominiums, while preserving the stately and historic Gothic puddingstone exterior. The resulting hybrid is a combination of the styles of two centuries—one comprised of rough rock, the other a geometric complex of smooth glass and steel. 

Photo via Wikimedia/Creative Commons

65. Abbotsford
300 Walnut Ave., Roxbury
Year completed: 1872
Architect: Alden Frink

This impressive high Victorian Gothic mansion is built entirely from Roxbury puddingstone. In its lifetime, the building, with its pointy window arches, has been a home for Boston Lead Works’ owner Aaron Davis Williams, a disciplinary school for boys, and now, the Museum of the National Center of Afro-American Artists.

Photo by Robert Benson

64. East Boston Branch of the Boston Public Library
365 S Bremen St., East Boston
Year completed: 2014
Architect: William Rawn Associates

One of the Boston Public Library’s newest outposts takes neighborhood libraries from dark carpets and old computers to one modern, light-filled room. A swooping wooden roof and wall-to-wall windows offer plenty of light for reading, and yes, even mooching WiFi. The Eastie branch is a reflection of the rapidly growing neighborhood it occupies—it’s LEED Gold Certified, looks out at an 18-acre park, and is surrounded by tiles that point to the top 21 countries of origin for East Boston residents. The building won the architectural honor of the Harleston Parker Medal in 2017.

Photo by Jules Struck

63. Millennium Tower
1 Franklin St., Boston
Year completed: 2016
Architect: Blake Middleton of Handel Architects

Look up at the Boston skyline in the evening and one building stands out—not just for its architecture, but for the image of the sunset sky that it mirrors. Millennium Tower’s crystalline exterior and sharp geometric angles give the building a futuristic appearance. And the luxury high-rise is certainly not an eyesore. In fact, it fixed one. Part of the original Filene’s store was gutted before the 2008 recession, leaving a gaping hole in downtown Boston. Indeed, the city’s third-tallest building filled that pit with over 400 impressively expensive residences.

Photo by Via Tsuji on Flickr/Creative Commons

62. The Great Dome at MIT
77 Mass. Ave, Building 10, Cambridge
Year completed: 1916
Architect: William Welles Bosworth

It was supposed to be a colossal assembly hall. But to the disappointment of Tim the Beaver, the university opted instead to budget for a smaller lecture hall and the Barker Engineering library. Still, the Neoclassical Great Dome and its perimeter of Corinthian columns is a commanding presence in the center of MIT’s campus—much like its inspiration, the Low Memorial Library at Columbia University. Both are modeled off of Rome’s famous Pantheon, though they worship knowledge in place of Roman gods.

Photo © Anton Grassl | ESTO

61. Bruce C. Bolling Municipal Building
2300 Washington St., Roxbury
Year completed: 2015
Architect: Mecanoo with Sasaki

The late Mayor Thomas M. Menino had a dilemma: the Boston Public School department needed a new office building. Architectural firm Mecanoo had an idea. Starting with the attractive limestone and terra cotta facade of Roxbury’s historic Ferdinand building, the architects combined two more historic facades—that of the granite Waterman and red brick Curtis—to create a new Modern Baroque building. The combination of these facades makes the Bruce C. Bolling building—named for the first black president of Boston’s City Council—a unique fixture of Dudley Square.

Photo by Randy Robinson Photography

60. Nathan Appleton Residence 
39-40 Beacon St., Boston
Year completed: 1818
Architect: Alexander Parris, with additions by Hartwell and Richardson in 1888

In 1818, textile manufacturer Nathan Appleton and his business partner, Daniel Pinckney Parker, tore down some old buildings on Beacon Street to build some brownstones. Their new twin townhouses, designed in the Greek Revival style, have stood there since, complete with Ionic columned porches and wrought-iron summer balconies. In 1843, the poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow married Appleton’s daughter, Fanny, there, earning these red brick buildings a place in the National Historic Landmarks registry in 1977.

Photo by Alex Lau

59. Symphony Hall
301 Massachusetts Ave., Boston
Year completed: 1900
Architect: McKim, Mead, and White

Originally intended to be named “Boston Music Hall,” Symphony Hall houses the first auditorium specifically designed with scientific acoustical principles in mind. Modeled after a similarly striking building in Germany, the place is thought to be one of the finest concert halls in the world. Before taking up residence in Symphony Hall, the famed Boston Symphony Orchestra spent a few years in the old Boston Music Hall on Winter Street. Founded in 1881, the BSO moved to Symphony Hall upon the building’s completion in 1900, with the Boston Pops Orchestra not far behind.

Photo by Jules Struck

58. Boston Opera House
539 Washington St., Boston
Year completed: 1928
Architect: Thomas W. Lamb

Starting in the Roaring 20s, the opera house dazzled visitors catching movies on the big screen at what was then called the B.F. Keith Memorial Theatre. By the 21st century, the building became derelict, and an extensive restoration projection was launched to return it to its former splendor. The restoration brightened up the interior’s gold leaf finishing, Carrera marble, paintings, and tapestries. The grand staircases and chandeliers, as well as the oak and silk paneling were reinvigorated. Now home to the Boston Ballet, the Boston Opera House reopened with a show of Broadway’s “The Lion King” in 2004, and hosts enchanting performances of “The Nutcracker” every Christmas season.

Photo by Eric Clark

57. Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum
25 Evans Way, Boston
Year completed: 1902
Architect: Willard T. Sears

It’s a wonder to think that at one time, the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, formerly known as Fenway Court, was actually Gardner’s private home. The museum, inspired by Venice’s 15th-century Palazzo Barbaro, houses an enchanting four-story central courtyard, roofed in glass so that the natural sunlight streams in. Arches interspersed with colonettes surround the verdant courtyard, which guests can overlook through windows and balconies from the upper levels. Gardner’s influence on the design is profound, and her ownership lingers. When she died in 1924, her will decreed that the museum must remain exactly as she left it—with all her unique art and decorative furnishings in place.

Photo courtesy of Engel & Volkers Boston

56. McLauthlin Building
120 Fulton St., Boston
Year Completed: 1864
Architect: Unknown

The McLauthlin building is one of New England’s earliest examples of a cast-iron and brick façade, a style often seen in New York but comparatively uncommon for Boston. The building used to be a manufacturing plant for the McLauthlin Elevator Company, but in the ‘70s it was converted into condominiums. The beautiful exterior remains mostly unchanged.

Photo by ctj71081 on Flickr/Creative Commons

55. King’s Chapel
58 Tremont St., Boston
Year completed: 1754
Architect: Peter Harrison

The dark Quincy granite and imposing Ionic colonnade at the forefront of this landmark on the Freedom Trail certainly doesn’t look like it was thrown together, but parts of its parent structure were. Thrown out the window, that is. The original building, a small wooden chapel, was crafted for Anglican British officers, making it very unpopular with Bostonians in the neighborhood. The new Georgian-style chapel was built around the existing wooden structure so church services could continue during construction. When it was finished, builders disassembled the old wood and literally chucked it through the church’s arched windows. These days, historic King’s Chapel is just steps from City Hall, and serves as an independent, Christian Unitarian congregation.

Photo by Eric Clark

54. 500 Boylston
500 Boylston St., Boston
Year completed: 1989
Architect: John Burgee Architects with Philip Johnson

You might recognize the inside of it from the early 2000s comedy Boston Legal, as the show’s Crane, Poole & Schmidt law firm occupied the 14th, 15th, and fictional 28th floor. This rose-granite, postmodern behemoth towers over Copley Square. What makes 500 Boylston truly phenomenal is its entrance courtyard, composed of two symmetrical “wings” made up of soaring columns.

Photo by Robert Lindsell on Flickr/Creative Commons

53. First Baptist Church 
110 Commonwealth Ave., Boston
Year Completed: 1872
Architect: H.H. Richardson

The First Baptist Church’s shadowy walkways and creeping vines offer a peaceful respite from the noisy city streets. The building is a gorgeous Romanesque bastion, similar to nearby Trinity Church, done by the same architect. The Baptist church, however, was Richardson’s first church in the city. The spectacular friezes on the building’s tower were designed by Federic Auguste Bartholdi, who also happened to design the Statue of Liberty.

Photo by Katie Haugland Bowen on Flickr/Creative Commons

52. Christian Science Church
250 Mass Ave., Boston
Year completed: 1906
Architect: Franklin I. Welch, Charles Brigham, S.S. Beman

The Mother Church of Christian Science looks more like it belongs in Renaissance Italy than the Back Bay. The original design, by Mary Baker Eddy herself, was in the style of a more traditional New England church before it was expanded in 1906 to the ornate landmark it is today. The final touch, the portico with its Corinthian columns, was completed in the ‘70s.

Photo by Jules Struck

51. Suffolk County Courthouse
1 Pemberton Square
Year Completed: 1894
Architect: George A. Clough

Serious and imperial, this building fits with the swishing of black robes, the bang of a gavel, the suggestion of justice being served. The classical structure, also known as the John Adams Courthouse, was originally a little shorter, but in 1909 the state decided that law and order required more room, so the architect added two stories.

Photo by Simone Migliori

50. Union Oyster House
41 Union St., Boston
Year Completed: 1704
Architect: Unknown

The Union Oyster House is as a part of Boston as the streets themselves. This immovable Georgian cornerstone of the city seems to have stayed the same since 1826. The building has hosted numerous high-profile guests over the years, even serving as the hidey-hole for Louis Philippe, King of France, from 1830 to 1848 during his exile.

Photo by Ellen Gerst

49. The First Harrison Gray Otis House
141 Cambridge St., Boston
Year completed: 1795
Architect: Charles Bulfinch

The Otis House, a beefy hunk of history straddling Beacon Hill and the West End, is the neighborhood’s last holdover from the original Bowdoin Square days. (So, none of that urban renewal stuff.) It’s a landmark example of Federal style, a perfect cube of brilliantly preserved red brick with none of the frills. It was moved backward during street widening in 1925.

Photo by JyNsH on Flickr/Creative Commons

48. Fairmont Copley Plaza
138 St James Ave, Boston
Year Completed: 1912
Architect: Henry Janeway Hardenbergh

This Beaux Arts staple is clean and classy, fitting for an elite hotel. The Fairmont’s limestone details and buff brick walls are understated yet impressive, and the plaza view isn’t so bad, either. It was built on the original site for the Museum of Fine Arts.

Photo by Eric Clark

47. Boston Chinese Church of Saving Grace
115 Broadway, Boston
Year completed: 1934
Architect: Blackall, Clapp and Whittemore

It was only 100 years ago that Boston’s smallest neighborhoodBay Villagewas a hub for film distribution. Art Deco-style warehouses sprang up in the early 20th century, including this one at 115 Broadway. Built for 20th Century Fox, the boxy building is now home to the Boston Chinese Church of Saving Grace. You can still glimpse its columns, scallops, and Art Deco flourishes from the street.

Photo by Eric Clark

46. Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
600 Atlantic Ave., Boston
Year Completed: 1977
Architect: Hugh Stubbins Jr.

This heavy building is not subtle. Huge and powerful is more like it. The Federal Reserve Bank stands solidly over the city like some angular cousin of the Easter Island heads. It’s sometimes called the “washboard building,” for obvious reasons.

Photo by Scott D on Flickr/Creative Commons

45. Skinny House
44 Hull St., Boston
Year completed: 1884
Architect: Unknown

Nestled between two brick buildings in the North End, this pale green structure was built in 1884 out of spite. According to legend, two brothers inherited a plot of land in the neighborhood from their father. After serving in the Civil War, one brother came home to find that his brother had built a large house on their shared land. Miffed, he built what’s been affectionately dubbed the Skinny House, blocking sunlight and his brother’s views of the harbor. The 1,166-square-foot abode is about 10 feet wide by 30 feet long. It also has no front door from the street—the main entrance is in a side alley.

Photo by Ellen Gerst

44. Restoration Hardware Building
234 Berkeley St., Boston
Year completed: 1863
Architect: William Gibbons Preston

Built in the French Academic style to suit its original use as Boston’s Museum of Natural History, the building that now houses a Restoration Hardware showroom is more than elegant enough to match the wares it sells. A recent renovation by Backen, Gillam & Kroeger updated it with a modern glass entryway and a glass-walled elevator that anchors the center of the showroom, surrounded by luxe chandeliers and mirrored arches.

Image courtesy of Rasky Partners, Inc.

43. One Dalton
One Dalton St., Boston
Year completed: 2018
Architect: Henry Cobb

One Dalton, set to open as the Four Seasons Hotel & Private Residences in late 2018, rises 61 stories in Back Bay. It stands just across from the Christian Science Center Administration Building done by I.M. Pei, Cobb’s longtime friend and cofounder of his firm, Pei Cobb Freed & Partners. Poised to be the tallest residential tower in New England at 740 feet high, the building is clad entirely in glass. It’s meant to resemble a “soft triangle,” with three curved faces and three distinct sections meant for public space, hotel rooms, and private residences.

Photo by Angelo Mercado on Flickr/Creative Commons

42. Kresge Auditorium
W16, 48 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge
Year Completed: 1955
Architect: Eero Saarinen

Like some huge, pearlescent leaf, this artful auditorium’s domed roof is expertly balanced on just three points. It’s actually the third roof since 1955—the original white orastone was replaced with lead sheeting and finally copper in the 1980s. Copper was the preferred material of Eero Saarinen, but in the ‘50s, it puzzled builders how to implement it.

Photo by Jason Brookman on Flick/Creative Commons

41. The Ether Dome
55 Fruit St., Boston
Year Completed: Opened 1821
Architect: Charles Bulfinch, Alexander Parris

The Ether Dome is the crown on the Bulfinch Building, property of Mass. General Hospital. Its rounded roof can be seen at the center of the Greek Revival structure. Visitors are allowed to check out the inside of the dome—it’s a former surgical amphitheater where ether was first used in an operation.

Photo by Ellen Gerst

40. The Architects’ Corner
44-48 Brattle St., Cambridge
Year completed: 1966-1971
Architect: The Architects Collaborative

In addition to being a stunning sculpture of concrete and glass, the Architects’ Corner has quite the history. The sparkling gem among Cambridge’s bricks was a neighbor for the home of architecture dream team The Architects Collaborative—made up of eight influential architects including Walter Gropius. It was also the site of legendary (and now defunct) retailer Design Research, founded by The Architects Collaborative member Benjamin Thompson, as well as the offices of Sert, Jackson & Associates, and Benjamin Thompson & Associates. In recent years, the grouping of buildings has housed Crate and Barrel and Anthropologie.

Photo by Gabrielle DiBenedetto

39. The Last Tenement
42 Lomasney Way, Boston
Year completed: 1870s
Architect: Unknown

The building at 42 Lomasney Way stands eerily and singularly, and with a startling amount of open space around it. Known as the Last Tenement, the three-story, yellow brick structure is the last vestige of the old West End, pre-Urban Renewal. It somehow survived when the neighborhood around it was razed, and stayed standing as train lines, highways, and the TD Garden sprang up around it. It’s been clad with billboards for years and is still home to a few lucky tenants.

Photo by Madeline Bilis

38. Boston Athenaeum
10 ½ Beacon St., Boston
Year completed: 1849
Architect: Edward Clarke Cabot, Henry Forbes Bigelow

The Athenaeum is cited as one of the first major examples of the revival of Italian Renaissance architecture. According to the Society of Architectural Historians, it became a popular style of building for cultural organizations in the late nineteenth century. As one of the country’s earliest membership libraries, the Athenaeum was created with space for both art and books in mind. In 1913, two floors were added to the building. They were set back so as not to disturb the original facade of the building, and brought it to a total of six levels, including the basement conservation lab.

Photo by Simone Migliori

37. L.A. Burdick’s
220 Clarendon St., Boston
Year Completed: 1883
Architect: M. W. Brown

The little abode at 220 Clarendon St. has stood proudly (albeit its height) since 1883. More than a century later, in 2012, L.A. Burdick’s opened at the spot. An infinitely delicious—and somewhat unexpected-looking—chocolate shop seems to be a perfect fit for the cozy stucco house, no?

Photo by Alex Lau

36. Paramount Theatre
559 Washington St., Boston
Year completed: 1932
Architect: Arthur Bowditch

Before the AMC or the Regal, if you wanted to see a movie in Boston, you had to head to the Paramount. With timeless Art Deco details inside and out—from the primary-colored marquee and sign painted with scenes from mythology, the now-Emerson College-owned theater is a trip back to a time when popcorn and a ticket didn’t cost you your entire paycheck.

Photo by Simone Migliori

35. Burrage Mansion
314 Commonwealth Ave., Boston
Year completed: 1901
Architect: Charles Brigham

It looks like a chateau that belongs in the French countryside, but Albert Burrage’s mansion sits right on Comm. Ave. Turrets, balconies (plural), and intricately carved moulding reflect Burrage’s taste for the finer things in life—shared today by former resident Tom Brady.

Photo by Sarah Nichols on Flickr/Creative Commons

34. Harbor Towers
65-85 E India Row, Boston
Year completed: 1971
Architect: Henry Cobb, I.M. Pei & Partners

Another example of Boston’s fraught relationship with Brutalism, the Harbor Towers soar —or loom, if you dislike them—40 stories over the waterfront. The towers, which are some of the only high-rise buildings along the harbor, are sandwiched between the Aquarium and the boats lining Rowe’s Wharf. While we happen to like them, the city is divided on how it feels.

Many people have said the best thing about living in the Harbor Towers is not having a view of the Harbor Towers. (To that we say: Why even move into the Brutalist beauties at all with that attitude?) And yet architect Harry Cobb, who worked on the project, seems to understand.  “I do not regard Harbor Towers as my best effort in Boston,” Cobb said to Boston in a 2008 email. “I am sympathetic to those who believe that in the perspective of history this could be seen as the wrong project in the wrong place at the wrong time.”

Photo by Jules Struck

33. William Hickling Prescott House
55 Beacon St., Boston
Year completed: 1808
Architect: Asher Benjamin

This impressive Federal-style construction stands apart from its fellow brick neighbors, thanks to unique rounded bay fronts and white columns. It was built overlooking the Common in 1808 for a merchant named James Smith Colburn, and on land once owned by portrait painter John Singleton Copley to boot. In 1845, historian William Hickling Prescott moved into the house, and about a century later, it was purchased by the National Society of Colonial Dames. The home is now open as a house museum select Wednesdays and Saturdays.

Photo by Eric Clark

32. Old John Hancock Building
200 Berkeley St., Boston
Year Completed: 1947
Architect: Cram and Ferguson

Also referred to as the Berkeley Building, the Old John Hancock Building stands proudly as the 19th-tallest building in Boston. When it was built in 1947, however, it was the second-tallest. The Art Deco-style tower was topped off with a weather beacon in 1950. The beacon’s light flashes red and blue to relay weather reports. Here’s the old saying that helps decipher what the lights mean: “Steady blue, clear view. Flashing blue, clouds due. Steady red, rain ahead. Flashing red, snow instead.”

Photo by Kenneth Lu on Flickr/Creative Commons

31. Armory of the First Corps of Cadets
101 Arlington St., Boston
Year completed: 1897
Architect: William Gibbons Preston

Once an impenetrable armory for the First Corps of Cadets, then later (well, until May 2018) a Smith & Wollensky steakhouse, this medieval-style castle is an Arlington Street icon. If you were to climb all the way past that beautifully laid stonework and stand on top of the tower, you would be able to send a signal to the State House. You couldn’t expect a response, though, as it hasn’t been used as a military post in over 50 years.

 

Photo by Steve Petrucelli on Flickr/Creative Commons

30. Paul Revere House
19 N Square, Boston
Year Completed: 1680
Architect: John Jeffs

Architecturally, this Elizabethan Tudor-style house is just another example of the abundant Colonial-era buildings around Boston. Even so, it’s pretty cool to see where Paul Revere spent his time when he wasn’t announcing impending revolutions.

Photo by Alex Lau

29. Museum of Fine Arts
465 Huntington Ave., Boston
Year completed: 1909
Architect: Guy Lowell

The MFA is a masterclass in Classical architecture, inside and out. Visitors walk under Ionic columns at the entrance, climb up into a rotunda under a dome and wander through galleries whose ceilings are decked with moulding and coffers. Although the exterior is uniformly Beaux Arts, new wings and galleries inside come from the modern, postmodern, and even quasi-Brutalist movements.

Photo by Eric Clark

28. Old Corner Bookstore
3 School St., Boston
Year completed: 1718
Architect: Unknown

On the former site of Anne Hutchinson’s wood-framed house stands the Old Corner Bookstore, now home to a Chipotle and a Bruegger’s Bagels. Later, Thomas Crease built the current sloping gambrel-roofed structure to house his apothecary before it was turned into the Ticknor & Fields (Little WomenThe Scarlet Letter) publishing house.

Photo by Jules Struck

27. The Flour & Grain Exchange Building
177 Milk St., Boston
Year completed: 1892
Architect: Shepley, Rutan, and Coolidge

If it’s possible for one structure to look like an office building, castle, and medieval church all at the same time, the Flour and Grain Exchange does just that. Its crowned turrets jut out from a Romanesque base with the style’s signature rounded windows, all done in pink Milford granite.

Photo by Alex Lau

26. Faneuil Hall
4 S Market St., Boston
Year completed: 1742
Architect: John Smibert, with a Charles Bulfinch renovation

“Cradle of Liberty,” “home of free speech,” or “tourist trap”—whatever you call it, Faneuil Hall is one of Boston’s most-visited and most-recognizable buildings. Originally built in a severely traditional fashion to house meetings and markets for the city of Boston, Charles Bulfinch swooped in around 1806 to double its width, add a floor, and move the cupola from the middle to its iconic perch at the front end.

Photo by Ellen Gerst

25. Community Rowing Boathouse
20 Nonantum Rd., Brighton
Year completed: 2008
Architect: Anmahian Winton Architects

The nation’s largest public rowing organization has sick digs. The boathouse, one of the few on the Charles not owned and operated by a college, looks out on the water with huge windows and lets the breeze in with wood panels that resemble the river itself.

Photo by Ellen Gerst

24. Sunflower Castle
130 Mount Vernon St., Boston
Year completed: 1845
Architect: Clarence Luce, James McNeely, Frank Hill Smith

The Sunflower Castle blooms like a big, bright flower among more traditional Federal and Colonial-style structures. Though it was built in 1845, it was architects Clarence Luce and Frank Hill Smith who overhauled the exterior to convert the home into a flowery residence in 1878. Today, the colorful Arts and Crafts abode is easily recognizable near the corner of Mount Vernon and Charles Streets, thanks to its petal-filled medallions carved into the walls under its eaves. The iconic “castle” was famously home to watercolor artist Gertrude Beals and her husband, architect Frank Bourne. Beals painted her studio inside the home in a work titled “The Artist’s Studio—Sunflower Castle.”

Photo by Ellen Gerst

23. Memorial Hall
45 Quincy St., Cambridge
Year completed: 1877
Architect: William Robert Ware, Henry Van Brunt

To a small child, Memorial Hall looks like just another one of Harvard’s red brick buildings. Grow a little taller and you can appreciate the High Gothic building’s stained glass windows and beautifully patterned roof, tiled in alternating blue, tan, and red stripes and triangles. The crown jewel is the structure’s tower, iced in red and blue and complete with a zig zag design.

Photo by Alex Lau

22. Cutler Majestic Theatre
219 Tremont St., Boston
Year completed: 1903
Architect: John Galen Howard

Saved from the wrecking ball in 1983 by Emerson College and subsequently restored by Elkus Manfredi Architects, the Cutler Majestic is, well, majestic. From the outside, arches frame a trio of Tiffany stained-glass windows flanked by fluted Ionic columns. The theater’s splendor is further accentuated by intricate stone carvings of fruit atop each window, surrounding three theater masks depicting happiness, sadness, and anger. Inside, the atmosphere is Edenlike, as the ceiling is designed to resemble a heavenly trellis with patches of blue sky.

Photo by Alex Lau

21. Old State House
206 Washington St., Boston
Year completed: 1713
Architect: Original unknown. Restorations by Isaiah Rogers; George Albert Clough; Goody, Clancy & Associates

Another brick Georgian building from Colonial times, the Old State House doesn’t have a fancy gold hat like the new one, but it has a heck of a history. It was the site of the Boston Massacre and the place where the Declaration of Independence was first read, to start. Its facade boasts a beautifully decorated clock and statues of a lion and a unicorn. A time capsule from 1901 was found inside the lion’s head in recent years, and then replaced with a new capsule in 2014.

Photo by Tony Hisgett on Flickr/Creative Commons

20. South Station
700 Atlantic Ave., Boston
Year Completed: 1899
Architect: Shepley, Rutan & Coolidge; Norcross Bros.

Like a tiered wedding cake, South Station is a masterpiece of Neoclassical architectural highlights. The Beaux Arts landmark is one of Boston’s grandest gatekeepers and has a regality befitting its function.

Photo by Ellen Gerst

19. Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts
24 Quincy St., Cambridge
Year Completed: 1963
Architect: Le Corbusier with Sert, Jackson & Gourley

Behold the only Le Corbusier creation in the entire United States. Located on Harvard’s campus in Cambridge, this Modernist building serves as the university’s art center. Every side of this funky structure reveals a unique perspective. You’re bound to appreciate at least one.

Photo by Maciek Lulko on Flickr/Creative Commons

18. John F. Kennedy Library & Museum
Columbia Point, Boston
Year completed: 1979
Architect: I.M. Pei, I.M. Pei & Partners

The John F. Kennedy Library & Museum revels in simplicity. Finished in 1979 on scenic Columba Point (after considering eight different sites) the I.M. Pei creation overlooks the sea. A bright, white nine-story pyramid anchors the structure, connecting to a two-story cylinder-shaped building with help from a parallelogram of grey glass. According to the Boston Society of Architects’ AIA Guide to Boston, the glass housing the 110-foot-high Presidential Pavilion is an architectural statement to its importance.

Photo by Simone Migliori

17. Horticultural Hall
300 Massachusetts Ave., Boston
Year completed: 1901
Architect: Edmund March Wheelwright

When Horticultural Hall opened in 1901, its first residents were some of the city’s brightest—and best-smelling: azaleas, geraniums, trumpet lilies, palms, wisteria, and hundreds of orchids dazzled visitors. But today, instead of flowers, the English Renaissance-style building’s atrium is home to the offices of this very publication. Built as the third Horticultural Hall in Boston (the other two have since been demolished), the structure flaunts huge pilasters, wreaths, and stone garlands of fruit and plants. It was designed by Edmund March Wheelwright, an influential architect and great-uncle of architect Harry Cobb, who also designed the Longfellow Bridge, Harvard Lampoon Building, and the Massachusetts Historical Society, among other Boston buildings.

Photo by Mad Ball on Flickr/Creative Commons

16. MIT Chapel
48 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge
Year completed: 1955
Architect: Eero Saarinen

One of only a few Saarinen buildings in New England, the MIT Chapel is a midcentury wonder. From the outside, its curving brick walls make a statement on campus. Inside, however, they take on a whole new meaning. A circular skylight carved out of the ceiling provides the only light source for the non-denominational center for worship. A hanging sculpture by Harry Bertoia suspends in this light, cascading all the way down to the floor. With the cylindrical walls as a backdrop, the space emanates an otherwordly sense of calm.

Photo via Wikimedia/Creative Commons

15. Harvard Lampoon Building
44 Bow St., Cambridge
Year completed: 1909
Architect: Edmund March Wheelwright

Some say it looks stupid, but the Lampoon Castle’s silly brick facade, built to resemble a face with a hat, jibes perfectly with the world’s second-longest continually published humor magazine’s eclectic vibe. Its hat—sorry, its roof—is topped with an ibis statue, at least when it’s not being stolen by the Crimson staff.

Photo by Michelle Lee on Flickr/Creative Commons

14. Quincy Market
4 S Market St., Boston
Year Completed: 1826
Architect: Alexander Parris

Most go for the food or the spectacle, and this building is rarely free of the hordes. But take a breather next time to appreciate Quincy Market’s grand old Greek Revival columns and the imperial cornices that have overlooked the busy streets since 1742.

Photo via Paul Geffen on Flickr/Creative Commons

13. Old South Church
645 Boylston St., Boston
Year completed: 1873
Architect: Charles Amos Cummings, Willard T. Sears

The Old South Church is truly a part of Boston—it’s literally built out of the bedrock that lies underneath Roxbury. It’s a proud member of the High Victorian Gothic architectural family, with ornate wrought iron and red and gray stonework. Yes, it’s got that super-visible campanile, but the Old South Church also has a “lantern” (or a copper-covered cupola) on top.

Photo by Alex Lau

12. State House
24 Beacon St., Boston
Year Completed: 1798
Architect: Charles Bulfinch

The State House is renowned as a landmark of Federal architecture, and its trim exterior certainly exudes a business-like regality befitting a government building. The architect, Charles Bulfinch, was a true Bostonian through-and-through, and the clear choice for the State House’s designer. Bulfinch was born and raised in the city, and though he worked on several projects in the development of the U.S. Capitol, he never strayed too far from Boston. The copper for the State House’s original dome was supplied by the company of another important Bostonian, Paul Revere. Yep, that Revere.

Photo by JyNsH on Flickr/Creative Commons

11. Trinity Church
206 Clarendon Street, Boston
Year Completed: 1877
Architect: Henry Hobson Richardson

Trinity Church is a Gothic interlude to the commercial Newbury Street neighborhood. With its cast of stone-faced gargoyles, the impressive building looms over passers-by like some huge medieval chess piece. Its auditorium was designed to reflect the emerging democratic spirit of the late 19th century. The overall style was dubbed Richardsonian Romanesque after the architect.

Photo by Eric Clark

10. Old City Hall
45 School St., Boston
Year completed: 1865
Architect: Arthur Gilman and Gridley James Fox Bryant

Despite its name today, Old City Hall was a refreshingly new style of building upon completion in 1865. Its architects, Arthur Gilman and Gridley James Fox Bryant, drafted a design never before seen in Boston, borrowing from the new addition to the Louvre in Paris to build one of the first French Second Empire structures in the United States. A protruding central pavilion dominates the 80,000-square-foot building, topped by a sloping mansard roof—a hallmark of French Second Empire design. At one point, the Boston Redevelopment Authority talked of demolishing Old City Hall, but an early example of adaptive reuse saved the place. Now it’s home to a Ruth’s Chris Steakhouse and several offices. Better than a pile of rubble, eh?

Photo by Olga Khvan

9. Prudential Center
800 Boylston St., Boston
Year completed: 1964
Architect: The Luckman Partnership

When the Pru pierced Boston’s short skyline in 1964, it towered over everything. Today, most Bostonians can’t picture the city without it—postcards, t-shirts, and Instagrams aren’t complete without a likeness of the International-style construction. The Hub’s favorite skyscraper, which is crowned by the Top of the Hub restaurant, soars 749 feet high, and is the second-tallest building within city limits (for now, at least).

Photo by Meredith Foley

8. Boston Public Library
700 Boylston St., Boston
Year completed: 1895
Architect: McKim, Mead, and White

The BPL is a combination of two stunning structures: the Beaux Arts McKim Building and Brutalist Johnson Building. The McKim has always had impressive curb appeal, from its iron scones to its arching bronze doors. The Johnson, added by architect Philip Johnson in 1972, wasn’t always so fortunate. But in 2016, William Rawn Associates finished an overhaul to the addition, opening it up to the street and letting abundant light stream into the country’s first public library.

Photo by Massachusetts Office of Travel & Tourism on Flickr/Creative Commons

7. Custom House Tower
3 McKinley Square, Boston
Year completed: 1847, tower added in 1915
Architect: Ammi Burnham Young, tower added by Peabody & Stearns

For Boston’s first skyscraper, you’d think the city would have scraped enough money together for a functional clock. This Neoclassical tower, smack dab in the middle of Boston, had a faulty clock for most of the 20th century due to a motor that was too small to power its copper-plated California redwood hands. The former customs house is now a Marriott timeshare hotel, yet it’s still decked out with Quincy granite columns and a dome carved from Vermont white marble.

Photo via iStock

6. Erich Lindemann Mental Health Center
25 Staniford St., Boston
Year completed: 1971
Architect: Paul Rudolph

The Erich Lindemann Mental Health Center is a hulking, overlooked mass of concrete that’s part of an incomplete building complex. It’s also a stunning achievement of one of the 20th century’s most renowned Modernist architects. Designed by Paul Rudolph in 1962 and completed in 1971, the Brutalist creation is a decidedly imposing presence just a few blocks from City Hall. Dramatic concrete projections heighten its grandeur, while dark shadows are cast by sunshades. Perhaps its most distinctive feature is its rippling walls, which workers finished by hand, first casting the concrete in ribbed wooden molds before using bush hammers to chip away at the aggregate. A balance of form and function, the texture masks large swaths of the exterior from the discoloration that comes from weathering.

Photo by Eric Clark

5. Berkeley Building
414-426 Boylston St., Boston
Year completed: 1905
Architect: Stephen Codman and Constant Désiré Despradelle

It’s true that there are two structures in the city referred to as the Berkeley Building, but this one, (as opposed to what’s known as the Old John Hancock Building) is the original. The six-story building is one of the most extraordinary examples of Beaux Arts architecture in Boston. It’s also one of the most notable commercial buildings of the early 20th century, according to the Boston Landmarks Commission. That’s thanks in part to its defining feature: a terra cotta exterior. The material has been preserved over the years, and the facade’s sea motif is still intact. On your next walk by, take a second to appreciate the ornate grill work that tops the building, then look for the fish, seaweed, and sea shell sculptures adorning the exterior.

Photo by Eric Clark

4. Christian Science Center Administration Building
177 Huntington Ave., Boston
Year completed: 1972
Architect: Araldo Cossutta, I.M. Pei & Partners

The outside of 177 Huntington Ave. is straight out of 1972 (in a good way) thanks to its Brutalist grid design that refuses to be overlooked. But its recently reimagined interior, with a “media wall” projecting light patterns from the soon-to-be-finished reflecting pool outside, makes the former Christian Science Center Administration Building feel new again. 

Photo by Samantha Carey

3. 200 Clarendon
120 St. James Ave., Boston
Year completed: 1976
Architect: Henry Cobb, I.M. Pei & Partners

In its early days, the Hancock Tower (now known as 200 Clarendon) faced quite a few challenges. Most notably, during construction, windows broke and crashed to the street on windy days. But that’s all in the past for the iconic tower, which gleams and glimmers in all shades of blue and grey against a historic brick backdrop. As the tallest building in New England, the 790-foot-fall Hancock is also one of its most beautiful, thanks to its all-glass exterior envelope. It was designed by renowned architect Harry Cobb, who also designed the tower that will soon take the tallest title: One Dalton.

Photo via Wikimedia/Creative Commons

2. JFK Federal Building
15 Sudbury St., Boston
Year completed: 1966
Architect: Walter Gropius and Norman C. Fletcher of The Architects Collaborative with Samuel Glaser

Prior to construction of the John F. Kennedy Federal Building, it was rare for the federal government to fully embrace modern architecture. And that’s what makes the JFK building so remarkable. Designed by Walter Gropius, the German founder of the Bauhaus school, the building is a true modern marvel. He worked under the firm The Architects Collaborative (TAC) along with his assistant, Samuel Glaser, to craft two 26-story towers, anchored by a much lower four-story building.

Gropius’ Bauhaus ideals, which laid the basis for modern and International design, can be easily glimpsed in the JFK building. Its steel, glass, and concrete towers are sleek, refined, and minimally ornamented. The staggered towers make a statement of simplified design, rather than taking cues from their surroundings.

Photo by Jordan Eighty Seven on Flickr/Creative Commons

1. City Hall
1 City Hall Sq., Boston
Year completed: 1968
Architect: Michael McKinnell, Gerhard Kallmann, Edward Knowles

Ah, City Hall. If it’s possible to be the most-hated and most-loved building in Boston at the same time, then this one takes the prize. Though it’s been ranked one of the ugliest structures in the world, City Hall is, in fact, not ugly. It’s brutal and it’s beautiful. A reigning example of Brutalist architecture, Boston’s concrete-covered nerve center was the winning model of a 1962 design competition, and was built after Scollay Square was razed to make way for Government Center. The building was finished in 1968, and has been delighting (and horrifying) passersby with its honeycomb-like facade ever since.