RandomWalk
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- Feb 2, 2014
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What’s the modeling of the traffic flow if Dartmouth is closed?
I really don't understand why people think the design of the plaza needs to fit in with Trinity Church. Everything around Copley is the perfect Boston style: a total mishmash of whatever was popular at the time. Trinity is really different from the Old South Church. The Fairmount is really different from the Westin. The library is really different from the Hancock. The commercial buildings along Boylston are all different styles.Many of the elements would be completely appropriate on the Seaport waterfront, but feel very incompatible with Trinity Church and the surroundings here.
This pic gives a nice overall perspective of the layout. I like the curve or indentation along St James. Also the way all paths funnel people towards the middle. It's a dynamic park that will get better with age (and maybe some tweaks). When the new trees in the middle (circled) mature in a couple years, it will emphasize that funnel towards the middle even more..
I'd explain my thinking by comparing this to the overhaul of Winthrop Square in recent years. Compare it in 2009 and in 2024, after it was redeveloped. To me, the previous iteration distinctly reads, "Northeastern American city, early 20th century built environment". The current iteration isn't bad in the abstract, but culturally and architecturally it communicates very little sense of place. It could be a newly constructed public space in practically any city in the world.
I agree with @theSil's take on Winthrop Square, but it too will look much better in a few years once the trees grow in.Good point! Too bad that a major gain (construction of Winthrop Center in place of a horrendous parking garage) led to a smaller-scale negative with the updated park. Why'd they have to mess with it?!
And what happened to the John Winthrop statue?
thank you for inserting some logic and facts.I agree with @theSil's take on Winthrop Square, but it too will look much better in a few years once the trees grow in.
As to the statue, it was never a statue of John Winthrop! It's a statue of Robert Burns that was originally in the Fens, but was taken from the Fens and moved to Winthrop Square by a developer in the '70s. It was moved back to its original and rightful spot in the Fens when Winthrop Square closed down for construction in 2019.
This! 100%The issue is that these public spaces are bounded by monster multi lane roads that make plaza-adjacent businesses feel a world away. For Copley, if any of the Boylston businesses or the Fairmont were just one small travel lane from the plaza it would feel like you could flow between the spaces. But you can't because they're dedicated to cars. For City Hall, there are actually a few places right nearby including the excellent Dubliner across Cambridge, but that feels like a different neighborhood because of the wide road. These European plazas with cafes and bars spilling into them work because they're built for pedestrians. Barring some free standing food trucks/huts like Flour in the Common, it's not going to get any better.
Take a look at St Sulpice in Paris (which, by the way, has no grass...). Excellent example of fitting a plaza, a historic church, and tons of commercial uses right in the middle of the city. And it's got a few lanes for car travel too! The difference is the roads are small and low speed, and it's clearly dedicated to people over cars.
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