January 2007 Archives

Valentine's Day is for everyone!

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 Valentine's Day is for everyone we love. It's for our special someone, our friends, parents and children. Show your love and affection with fragrant fresh flowers, a special gift from the heart.

Always order early and this year consider having your delivery arrive on Monday, February 12th or Tuesday, February 13th so that Valentine happiness is enjoyed throughout the week! Imagine the recipient's delight when co-workers see the beautifully arranged flowers delivered to the workplace.

Flowers expertly designed at Central Square Florist will speak your thoughts of love and caring friendship. Call, visit our web site or stop by for your Valentine gift!

Seen below is our exclusive Elegant Wishes bouquet, starting at $65.  Click on the image for easy online ordering!

 Valentine's Day is for everyone we love. It's for our special someone, our friends, parents and children. Show your love and affection with fragrant fresh flowers, a special gift from the heart.

Always order early and this year consider having your delivery arrive on Monday, February 12Th or Tuesday, February 13Th so that Valentine happiness is enjoyed throughout the week! Imagine the recipient's delight when co-workers see the beautifully arranged flowers delivered to the workplace.

Flowers expertly designed at Central Square Florist will speak your thoughts of love and caring friendship. Call, visit our web site or stop by for your Valentine gift!

Seen below is our exclusive Elegant Wishes bouquet, starting at $65.  Click on the image for easy online ordering!

Compost that Stuff!

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 With the New Year Central Square Florist has begun to compost 100's of pounds of flower waste every week.  Coupled with are existing recycling of congruent cardboard material we have eliminated the two largest components of our store waste. We understand that composting helps preserve landfill space and reduce climate change by avoiding methane emissions from organic decay in landfills. The earth friendly processes of composting materials are turned into nutrient rich soil that helps grow fresh food. The material is picked up by Save that Stuff and more information on recycling is available from the City of Cambridge Public works.

Buying from local owned businesses

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Central Square Florist, Inc. has been a locally owned business for over 75 years in Cambridge.  Being locally owned is such a good thing that many non local businesses pretend to be right here in Cambridge MA.   Be sure to view their about us page and see in fact if they are located in Cambridge MA.  You need to be careful when using the yellow pages or even a local search for florist with Google. They and businesses like them often provide false information with locations of locally owned business. You can read more www.floristdetecive.com and see an investigation piece by WHDH in Boston.  The Federal Trade Commissionissued an article on this very subject.

Top Ten Reasons to Buy Local

  1. Significantly more money re-circulates in Cambridge when purchases are made at locally owned, rather than nationally owned, businesses.More money stays in the community because locally owned businesses purchase from other local businesses, service providers, and farms.
  2. Most new jobs are provided by locally owned businesses. Small local businesses are the largest employer nationally, and in Cambridge, they provide the most new jobs to residents.
  3. Our one-of-a-kind businesses are an integral part of our distinctive character. The unique character of Cambridge is what brought us here and will keep us here.
  4. Local business owners invest in community. Local businesses are owned by people who live locally and are more invested in the community's future.
  5. Customer service is better. Local businesses are closer to the customer and hire people with more specific product expertise for better customer service.
  6. Competition and diversity lead to more choices. A multitude of small businesses, each selecting products based on the needs of their local customers and not on a national sales plan, guarantees a much broader range of product choices.
  7. Environmental impact is less. Shopping at locally owned businesses is more energy efficient. Locally owned businesses make more local purchases, thus reducing the transportation costs of goods.
  8. Public benefits far outweigh public costs. Local businesses require comparatively little infrastructure investment and make more efficient use of public services as compared to nationally owned stores entering the community.
  9. Local businesses encourage investment in CambridgeA growing body of economic research shows that entrepreneurs and skilled workers are more likely to settle in communities that preserve their one-of-a-kind businesses and distinctive character.
  10. Non-profits receive greater support. Non-profit organizations receive an average 350% greater support from local business owners than they do from non-locally owned businesses. 

Cool Space includes Central Square Florist

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A recent article featured on cool space locator included a mention of our Flower Shop. They wrote:

Central Square is the historical commercial and governmental seat of Cambridge, Massachusetts, an inner-ring suburb of Boston. Cambridge lays just northwest of the City of Boston across the Charles River, and the first bridge to link the two cities was built in the 1700s. Central Square lay on the major route leading through Cambridge. By the late 19th century, the growth of industry, commerce, and the nearby Cambridgeport residential area led Central Square to grow in scale. Central Square became Cambridge's seat of government and commerce. The entire area became a center for arriving immigrants.

Geographically speaking, Pittsburgh and Cambridge have different conceptions of "neighborhoods" and neighborhood boundaries. In Pittsburgh's walkable communities, most neighborhoods include major commercial districts, like Lawrenceville's Butler Street corridor, and Dormont's West Liberty Avenue corridor. In Cambridge, an inner-ring suburb of Boston, neighborhoods are defined as residential districts, and major commercial districts often center and spread out from large intersections - squares - on the borders of these neighborhoods. Central Square is the intersection of Massachusetts Avenue, Western Avenue, Magazine Street, Prospect Street, and River Street. But when we speak of "Central Square" here, we're referring to the commercial district and larger community around the Square proper. Although Central Square isn't called a "neighborhood," it is both a diverse community in itself and the center of a larger one.

The development of Boston's metropolitan transportation network played a major part in shaping the current experience of the Square. The 1912 opening of the T, a light rail system, drew commerce toward downtown Boston and away from Central Square in Cambridge. Not long after, the introduction of the automobile allowed people to move farther into the metro area. Like many inner-ring suburbs in our region and across the country, Cambridge started to hollow out. Instead of reaching a regional market as it once did, Central Square businesses were serving a primarily local market. (Cambridge also includes campuses of MIT and Harvard.)

Today, as Central Square works to develop the assets of its business community, diversity has emerged as one of its most important values. There's a presence of both new economy and old economy. Biotech firms such as Novartis and Draper Labs exist alongside smaller retail shops that reach a huge variety of audiences. The Square has seen some tenants stay for the long haul, like Central Square Florist, which first opened in 1929. Some national chains, like the Gap and Starbucks Coffee, have arrived, but they haven't compromised the independent quality of the retail businesses. Teddy Shoes serves the general market for footwear, and it maintains a special selection of dance supplies. University Stationery, which has been in the Square since the 1940s, still offers unique variety and unmatched knowledge of stationery and office supplies. And because of continued immigration, ethnic shops and eateries still abound.

To keep the community pedestrian-friendly, the architecture and layout of the Square have undergone an historical throwback. During the 1990s, Massachusetts Avenue underwent a streetface improvement, which added benches, widened the sidewalks, and cut traffic lanes from four to two. Several new constructions promote the grid and walkability.

A Monday evening farmers market, to a visiting Pittsburgher, appropriately represented the mixing of past and present in Central Square. This farmers market is located in a parking lot just blocks away from a Red Line T-stop and a walkway lined with a mural, showing the influence of transportation and design on the Square. The market - its products and exchanges - represent the Square's commerce. And the people are a microcosm of the community itself: working professionals, residents, immigrants, and travelers.

"The feeling of it comes from the fact that [Central Square] is very diverse but also very integrated," said Marina Pevzner, executive director of the Central Square Business Association. The hallmark of this community is its mutual interdependence and connectedness.

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This page is an archive of entries from January 2007 listed from newest to oldest.

February 2007 is the next archive.

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