With construction
virtually complete on Boston's $14.6-billion Central Artery/Tunnel
project, officials now are eyeing final finishes on a $100-million
surface restoration program that will reunite the center city
with its historic waterfront. Three separate projects now
are under construction along the 1.5-mile long strip that
runs through the heart of the city.
Finishing
Touches. Greenway themes for the North End (top),
Wharf and Chinatown sections will reunite Boston's center
core. (Rendering courtesy of MTA)
Boston's urban center was torn
asunder in 1959 with the opening of a six-lane viaduct, the
Fitzgerald Expressway, which bulldozed large sections of the
historic North End and Chinatown and severed them from the
core city. The purpose of CA/T was to replace the viaduct
with tunnels and a cable-stayed bridge.
The viaduct was demolished in 2004
at a cost of over $130 million. That left about 30 acres of
prime real estate situated over the tunnels. “The idling
traffic of the elevated artery is being replaced by open space
and parks, which are knitting together downtown Boston with
its waterfront after the two were separated by the rusting
steel of the elevated highway some 50 years ago," says
Matthew J. Amorello, chairman of the Massachusetts Turnpike
Authority, which manages CA/T.
The work consists of reuniting
surface streets and linking a series of parks and open spaces.
Design packages, one each for adjacent Chinatown, Wharf and
North End sections, have been awarded to three teams. Carol
R. Johnson Associates, Boston, leads the Chinatown portion;
CSS, Boston, the North End piece; and Alexandria, Va.-based
EDAW Inc the Wharf section.
“There are two overarching
themes to the wharf design—one to recognize the prior
existence of the five wharves as they coursed through the
site and to recapitulate their alignment," says Dennis
B. Carmichael, EDAW vice president. “The five wharves:
City, Long, Central, India and Rose were originally built
from the waterfront out and the land was up to 1,000 ft back
and incrementally over time, the land was filled in."
EDAW and its prime subcontractor, Boston-based Copley Wolff
Design Group, are using the landmaking and the importance
of fishing and immigration as subordinate themes in granite.
EDAW's project encompasses four
blocks totaling about 4.5 acres and is about 135 ft wide on
average. Design fees run about $2 million, and a $13-million
construction package has been awarded to Jay Cashman Inc.,
Quincy, for a 2007 completion. The work includes planting
trees and constructing an interactive fountain, walkways,
open lawn areas and a promenade.
"We're building over existing
tunnel roof, which varies in height, and slurry walls that
crop up at odd angles so the sub-base varies greatly,"
says Brendan Campbell, Cashman project manager.
McCourt Construction, Quincy, is
working on the $14-million North End project and W.T. Rich,
Allston, won the $3.8-million Chinatown contract. Both sections
are scheduled to be substantially completed late this year.
The Chinatown project plays on
the cultural angle, creating a promenade and forecourt that
lead to a ceremonial gate. The North End section features
a “porches" environment—a granite promenade
accented by a pergola reflecting the Italian-American neighborhood's
street life.
• December 28 Issue
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