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Where does Boston put all its snow? I hiked 7 miles through the city to find out.

Before Monday’s blizzard, I happened to drive by a towering peak of snow in South Boston. If I were to rub my eyes and squint, I could have been convinced that the view in front of me was from back home in Pennsylvania. But no, the mountainous site seemed to be a snow farm, one that I walked almost 7 miles to find later on (we’ll get to that).

Much of the Northeast got walloped with snow this week during a Feb. 23 blizzard. Providence, Rhode Island, broke a record with a whopping 37 inches of snow. In Boston, we received 17 inches, bringing the total snowfall in the city so far this winter above 60 inches – the most in more than a decade.

As Monitor staff discussed covering the storm, an editor recalled that the city had created snow farms in years past as a place to dump the stuff instead of shoving polluted snow into Boston Harbor. I got assigned the quest of finding one and seeing how it operated.

Why We Wrote This

This week’s blizzard across much of the Northeast might make you wonder what cities do with the abundance of snow. In Boston, our reporter set off to find out – and ended up with an appreciation for the people who make it disappear.

My search led me on a journey to places in Boston I’ve never ventured before. Along the way, I discovered some revelations about this city that I wasn’t expecting when I set out.

When I received the assignment, I remembered my earlier drive. With some research, I learned Boston is operating 14 snow farms this year, the first time in years that a mayor ordered that many to be opened.

Unfortunately, I discovered the addresses for snow farms, which range from low-traffic parking lots to industrial sites, aren’t public. The city’s Public Works Department, while receptive to my media inquiry, was too busy to quickly schedule a tour.

Where does Boston put all its snow? I hiked 7 miles through the city to find out.

Victoria Hoffmann/The Christian Science Monitor

An excavator in Boston’s Seaport District scooped piles of snow and loaded it into a dump truck to transport to one of the city’s 14 snow farms Feb. 25, 2026.

Turning to Plan B, I asked myself how to search for that snow mountain I’d seen. The answer: TikTok. While sleuthing through videos of South Boston residents walking in the snow to get their Dunkin’ iced coffee, glimpses of South Boston’s Mount Everest popped up in the background. I started identifying possible street locations.

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