| BOULEVARDS | Wide streets in a city or town, typically lined with trees |
| BOULEVARD | Wide street in a city, typically lined with trees (9) |
| MAINSTREET | Where to find the only stoplight in a small town, typically |
| MAINDRAG | Street in a city center |
| BROADWAY | Wide street in New York sees a lot of dramatic events (8) |
| AVE | Wide street, in short |
| BLOCK | A simple five-letter noun, yet one carrying meanings from brick, wooden mass and a group of buildings in a city or town, to a head-like mould upon which to shape a hat or crown (5) |
| PARK | Grounds of a stately home; or, a green space in a city or town (4) |
| URBANITE | The quality or character of life in a city or town (8) |
| BLACKOUT | Word for amnesia or deliquium; the blinding of all light in a city or a theatre; a break in communication; media censorship; a power cut; or, the suspension of a broadcast (8) |
| URBAN | Living in a city or town (5) |
| PORT | A city or town with a harbour; the harbour itself; or, in nautical terminology, the left side of a ship, opposite starboard (4) |
| CENTRE | Filling in a chocolate; hub of a city or town; midpoint; or, a nucleus (6) |
| SACK | The plunder/pillage of a captured city or town; a large bag of burlap, gunny or hessian for flour, grain, potatoes or racing in; a woman's loose-fitting gown; or, a train of silk hanging from the shou |
| AVENUES | Wide streets sometimes lined with trees (7) |
| PRECINCT | In the US, a district of a city or town defined for policing purposes (8) |
| SUBURB | A residential district situated on the outskirts of a city or town (6) |
| CIVIC | Palindromic in relation to a city or town (5) |
| MAYORAL | Relating to an elected or chosen head of a city or town (7) |
| MAYOR | Elected head of a city or town (5) |