Got a question for people here, though it may be more appropriate in a different thread: how do you feel about the urban renewal destruction of past decades in Boston? Obviously it wasn't good that the city destroyed neighborhoods and ways of life and history. But at the same time, without those urban renewal mistakes, we might not today be experiencing the same type of growth around the whole city, much of which is building up either vacant lots or ugly urban renewal-era buildings created at that time. Thoughts?
That pit was an old quarry that yielded the famous Roxbury Puddingstone used all over the place in the 1800s. As best as I can tell it sat abandoned from around the '50s-ish on up until redevelopment with One Brigham Circle back in 2002. I have no idea about any previous proposals for the site though I am now curious.
Got a question for people here, though it may be more appropriate in a different thread: how do you feel about the urban renewal destruction of past decades in Boston? Obviously it wasn't good that the city destroyed neighborhoods and ways of life and history. But at the same time, without those urban renewal mistakes, we might not today be experiencing the same type of growth around the whole city, much of which is building up either vacant lots or ugly urban renewal-era buildings created at that time. Thoughts?
Huh. Very cool. There's a fair amount of stuff about the roxbury tenants of harvard and the redevelopment of that area by the hospitals and med school … I think most of what I read I found on archive.org, and some old online harvard crimson articles which come up by searching the right keywords... and I seem to remember a possible proposal to build the school of public health there, maybe. What i definitely recall reading is that harvard bought up all of the fenwood area, then deliberately didn't maintain it to make it look more blighted.
I still would love to see more photos of the mission housing project area predemo, and also the whole ruggles area, too... Must've been a lot of factory buildings, I imagine.
Got a question for people here, though it may be more appropriate in a different thread: how do you feel about the urban renewal destruction of past decades in Boston? Obviously it wasn't good that the city destroyed neighborhoods and ways of life and history. But at the same time, without those urban renewal mistakes, we might not today be experiencing the same type of growth around the whole city, much of which is building up either vacant lots or ugly urban renewal-era buildings created at that time. Thoughts?
The Central Artery didn't 'cater to the car.' It catered to the need of the city to move people and freight in and out of the city. Unless you think cars drove themselves. Railroad lines didn't 'cater to the train,' did they?
Matthew in 3... 2... 1...