Apartments near Arnold Arboretum in Boston, MA (4,677 Rentals)
9 Priesing St, Unit 3
44 Evergreen St, Unit 34
240 Heath St, Unit P20
12 Wensley St, Unit 2
143 Marcella St, Unit 1
182 Walnut Ave, Unit #3
145 Marcella St, Unit #2
70 Jamaicaway, Unit 5
45 Fort Ave, Unit 1
276 Parker Hill Ave, Unit 2
117 Centre St, Unit #2
1 Parker Hill Ter, Unit 2
10 Copenger St, Unit 3
145 Hillside St, Unit 2
143 Hillside St, Unit 2
142 Washington St
139 Hillside St, Unit A
201 Hillside St
122 Calumet St, Unit 1
122 Calumet St, Unit 1
3 Oswald St, Unit 4
3 Oswald St, Unit 1
14 Parker Hill Ave, Unit 3
2 Shepherd Ave, Unit 1
49 Delle Ave, Unit 2
11 Sewall St, Unit TownHouse
133 Saint Alphonsus St, Unit 3
129 Saint Alphonsus St, Unit 3
129 Saint Alphonsus St, Unit 3
16 Sewall St, Unit 16 Sewall Street
1 Wigglesworth St, Unit 2
45 Thorndike St, Unit 1
25 Custer St, Unit 106
17 Ballard St, Unit 1
45 Burnett St, Unit 204
50 Burnett St, Unit 1
7 Eliot St, Unit 1
10 Brewer St, Unit 1
98 Morton St, Unit 57
6 Alfred St, Unit 1
52 Green St, Unit 2
108 Hyde Park Ave, Unit 2
5 Greenley Pl, Unit 2
104 Robinwood Ave, Unit 2
4 Glade Ave, Unit 3
31 Robeson St, Unit 1
27 Clive St, Unit A
166 Boylston St, Unit 2
3147-3149 Washington St, Unit 2
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A picnic in the park on a beautiful day is a vision many of us have to get away from our lives of work, school and responsibilities. An excellent location to have this special picnic is at the Arnold Arboretum, located on 265 acres just south of Boston in Jamaica Plain. Cared for by Harvard University, it is owned by the City of Boston and leased to the university for 1,000 years, beginning in 1882. Arnold Arboretum was the first public arboretum in the country, and features a rolling landscape with 4,000 varieties of woody plants and 15,000 trees, shrubs and vines. They are located in forests and a few huge trees stand alone, surrounded by meadows and ponds. World-renowned plant species collections exist here. The splendid Boston skyline can be viewed from the highest point of the park, Peter's Hill. The arboretum is part of the Emerald Necklace Conservancy, a public-private partnership established in 1996. The mission of the organization, which includes several area Boston parks, including Back Bay Fens, Jamaica Park and Franklin Park, is to protect, maintain, restore and promote the natural landscapes of the Boston area as special places for visitor and residents to enjoy. The park has plenty of free parking, a visitor's center, restrooms and a bookstore. Hike and bike trails provide access for athletes and strollers alike, and bring along your dog if you wish - as long as you have him on a leash. It is accessible from the T on the Forest Hills Orange Line, or Bus 39. Open 365 days a year, if you want a breath of fresh air from your Boston apartment, grab a sandwich and some chips and plunk yourself on a park bench at the Arnold Arboretum.