Comments

wrote:
I have found this gallery absolutely amazing. If I have a few billion to throw around property in MA sounds rather nice. I love history and preserving it. If they will not save these then morecredit to you Motts for immortalizing what once was on film. You are a wonderful artist and I do hope to see more from you in the near future.
wrote:
No gravity involved. Cars moved through the ride on electricity.
wrote:
Wow Motts, that's real pretty. . . . . . . . .
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This is beautiful
wrote:
psych one,

SMA is a pretty rare disease and few folks have heard of it unless they have a family member affected with it. The reason I asked Henry L. about it is that negative air pressure vents are hardly used any more except by people with post-polio syndrome or SMA. There are a handful of other conditions and diseases that might result in the need for a device such as this, but they are generally even more rare than those two.
Thanks again Lynne, i am just medical term challenged. ;<)
wrote:
Ever been there?
I went to Home Depot but they didn't have the enough watts in the right size.
it looks like a building stood there. Just saying this because i think i see some foundation
Well it couldv'e been used for something other than hightening the piles at the junkyard.
Looks like someone had fun with that wall!
wrote:
Sorry - spinal muscular atrophy.
http://www.fsma.org/
wrote:
THATS THE AQUEDUCT!!!!!! I'VE WALKED FROM COURT STREET STATION TO THE AQUEDUCT!!!! I REALLY WANT TO GO TO CITY HALL STATION,OAK STREET STATION AND THE OAK STREET LOOP!!!!!!!!
wrote:
I happen to know why that stone arch is there,if you look out the Aqueduct(one of the arches)back from where you came, you'll see a stone bridge(near the Dinosaur BBQ,Ex.Lehigh Valley Station) before the subway was built,there was a stone bridge going over the Canal bed(now the subway and I-490/590). By The Way,I-490 WAS the eastern end of the Subway, that 1 mile section of tunnel is the only remaining portion of the subway that is not filled in or converted. Most of the "Subway" was un-enclosed, and so in todays terms would be a light rail system.
Lynne,
please excuse my ignorance, but what is SMA ?