Ron Newman
Senior Member
- Joined
- May 30, 2006
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This museum is what was supposed to be built over the ramps, but they decided that they couldn't afford to do that.
The stalled Greenway is testament to the NIMBY attitude that has plagued Boston for decades. No group(s) can collectively decide the design should be (surprise?) so now we argue about the perimeter. The utterly bland "no skyscraper, no modern, all brick" Boston model will rise to the top and create yet another sterilized "design by committee" look that permeates the city. The adjacent neighborhoods should define perimeter content, not an urban planner with committees that create utterly dull spaces fit for automatons.
The Greenway should be just that--green open space with plantings of native trees and shrubs with horticultural displays appropriate for our climate. To have nothing built on the Greenway is ridiculous. It creates a wasteland to get through, rather than a green space to linger in and enjoy. There should be strategically placed cafes/restaurants, 2 or 3 oasis of cultural interest and pleasant areas to rest. The model is called Central Park in Manhattan. This is another Boston bow-tied, over intellectualized approach to reinvent the wheel . . .
The Greenway should be just that--green open space with plantings of native trees and shrubs with horticultural displays appropriate for our climate. To have nothing built on the Greenway is ridiculous.