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Inventing the Charles River (MIT Press)

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Description

An illustrated account of the creation of the Charles River Basin, specializing in the precarious balance between transportation planning and the stewardship of the public realm.

The Charles River Basin, extending nine miles upstream from the harbor, has been known as Boston’s “Central Park.” Yet few realize that this it appears natural landscape is a totally fabricated public space. Two hundred years ago the Charles used to be a tidal river, edged by hundreds of acres of salt marshes and mudflats. Inventing the Charles River describes how, before the creation of the basin could begin, the river first needed to be imagined as a single public space. The brand new esplanades along the river changed the best way Bostonians perceived their city; and the basin, with its expansive views of Boston and Cambridge, became an iconic image of the metropolis.

The book specializes in the precarious balance between transportation planning and stewardship of the public realm. Long before the esplanades were realized, great swaths of the river were given over to industrial enterprises and transportation — millponds, bridges, landfills, and a complex network of road and railway bridges. In 1929, Boston’s first major highway controversy erupted when a four-lane road used to be proposed as a part of a new esplanade. At twenty-year intervals, three riverfront road disputes followed, successively more complex and disputatious, culminating within the lawsuits over “Scheme Z,” the Big Dig’s plan for eighteen lanes of highway ramps and bridges over the river. More than four hundred photographs, maps, and drawings illustrate past and future visions for the Charles and document the river’s place in Boston’s history.

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