Submitted by Ironlining t3_yddlf9 in massachusetts
Comments
Ashamed_Pea6072 t1_itscgen wrote
Unfortunately I think the Big Dig was the best solution
NineDog999 t1_itsf3hv wrote
Unfortunately I think the Big Dig was the best solution OFFERED at the time
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If this was put forward today, I am confident there would be better solutions.
OldWrangler9033 t1_itstihy wrote
Like what? Put more buildings in? The greenway is at least park like verse more buildings.
OptimalFlight101 t1_itw1km0 wrote
Yea I'd rather city have more green spaces than buildings.
The highway into the city was necessary one way or another.
OldWrangler9033 t1_itxvyq0 wrote
It gets better. I'm old enough to have driven on that very same highway in its last years of existence. It was bloody narrow 6 lane highway split upper and and lower decks going Northward exiting city.
At one point, it had merge with single lane split to the Tobin bridge. Some people whom I knew who drove this "fun" stretch of the road called it the "Fun Game of Merge". This was because it was so bloody narrow and drivers were so frustrated they got highly...aggressive. I'm certainly glad above ground Central Artery is toast. It was one worse ideas for highway, I'm glad the other section wasn't built. The I-695, it would done worse things to the city.
yyzda32 t1_itsh7t1 wrote
It's funny, I think of the old Central Artery elevated and I remember:
"Kneeland St. CLOSED" When was it ever open?
Getting to Logan Airport was awful since you had to take the Callahan Tunnel to get there on 93.
LetMeSleepNoEleven t1_itsl1j2 wrote
I have not actually driven in Boston much since the big dig, so I don’t have much personal knowledge of the difference. But from a driving perspective as well as a walking perspective the Expressway was hell, from my memory. Especially going to the airport.
Love Storrow Drive though. Maybe screws up the riverfront but a driving dream.
Steltek t1_ituqwvv wrote
As a kid, my Mom was convinced if we walked around the Expressway, we'd be murdered. She very much had a "white flight"/combat zone view of downtown so most of my knowledge came from what I could see from the Expressway. The only thing I knew of Quincy Market were the glowing neon tubes in that glass breezeway.
Now as an adult, I can project my own fears on my kids: cars are fucking awful and drivers will blindly run you over while you're trying to walk or bike to school. Of course, the difference is that I'm right.
LetMeSleepNoEleven t1_itvgrbg wrote
Aligning one’s fears with statistics is always a good idea!
Ironlining OP t1_itrlzvc wrote
Yes I agree
PasswordisP4ssword t1_its6rp1 wrote
In Boston and many other cities, neighborhoods were demolished for "urban renewal" and highways cut through them. The highways take up valuable space, make transportation infrastructure more car-dependent, and segregated neighbors along class and racial lines. Yes, 2021 > 1969, but we're still living with the repercussions of the choices our forefathers made 50+ years ago, and we need to make better choices now for the next 50 years.
LetMeSleepNoEleven t1_itsfn6a wrote
Indeed. That’s what I referred to above with the expressway.
chancimus33 t1_itszg2z wrote
I more amazed someone was able to get a picture like that in 1939!
CertifiedBlackGuy t1_itu2vd1 wrote
It was one guy with one of those old-timey cameras and a really tall set of stilts.
Shapen361 t1_itsflhg wrote
This all just looks like one big clusterfuck to me.
ladykatey t1_itru8d6 wrote
What West End?
Angriest_Al t1_ittf4cw wrote
Just MGH and a few apartment buildings now
blounge87 t1_itssg41 wrote
Guess where the black neighborhood was? Hint, it’s government center plaza
lotsofbitz t1_itutenb wrote
My grandpa and his family got kicked out of the west end when they tore it all down, sad that I’ll never get to walk around his old neighborhood
SLEEyawnPY t1_itspw7x wrote
Boston between 1969 and 1972 was the inspiration behind a pretty interesting, though likely now somewhat forgotten book on ecology, anthropology, architecture, and urban development called Placeways: A Theory of the Human Environment by the (late?) E.V. Walter
Gratefulrubin90 t1_its2rwh wrote
Highways have helped Boston. Can you elaborate on your thoughts process regarding this?
nightbefore2 t1_its6glm wrote
Highways have helped Boston
[citation needed]
Ironlining OP t1_its3958 wrote
I dislike the destruction and cultural environment caused by them
IntelligentCicada363 t1_ituf0by wrote
Helped so much that the state had to undertake the most expensive infrastructure project ever in the US because it was actually helping too much.
The highways are what led to white flight and urban decay in Boston and elsewhere
goldfishman63 t1_ittac5l wrote
Ngl I can’t make any sense of this image
PHD_Memer t1_itutolk wrote
Highways destroyed like a fuckin quarter of the city
innam0rato t1_ittc80z wrote
Damn...imagine living in that Boston today, bet it'd be more fun
[deleted] t1_itt3mqo wrote
[deleted]
IntelligentCicada363 t1_ituf5cm wrote
That entire area north of beacon hill needs to be re demolished and completely redone. What a travesty
Watchfull_Hosemaster t1_itvgg1f wrote
The West End and Scollay Square neighborhoods were obliterated to make way not only for a highway, but for an underutilized wasteland of concrete to serve bureaucracy and government purposes (City Hall, IRS Building, JFK Federal Building).
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Downtown looks different, but this is due to redevelopment to make way for modern high-rises and an evolving commercial district.
The West End is still a weird area that feels like a little gated community. The Big Dig opened up a lot of the area for good redevelopment in the Bulfinch Triangle/North Station area and throughout downtown and the Seaport, though.
It would be nice to see this graphic a little zoomed out so we could see the Seaport area.
cowboyfromhell77 t1_itvia7g wrote
will the water be brown in 50 years
Quincyperson t1_itsxm5k wrote
The elevated highway probably gets a little too much blame for this one. Much of it was just centered on postwar urban renewal policies
SketchyCharacter4u t1_itroa4n wrote
Yes, imagine not having highways to transport thousands into the city everyday to work.
jbray90 t1_itsln81 wrote
Just like London
scolbath t1_itud4rs wrote
Or Paris
Luney2oons t1_itu8v1v wrote
Those poor country club folks from duxbury might have to get on a… train 😱
ISlothyCat t1_itu8i5h wrote
I don’t see any hurt depicted in these images. Can you elaborate on what is shown here?
IntelligentCicada363 t1_ituev4w wrote
Literally an entire neighborhood was razed, large swaths of the city are stuck next endless pollution/noise/ugly road ways, And this led to far too much car traffic inside the city
How to tell someone lives in the suburbs in 10 seconds or less
ISlothyCat t1_itufb3p wrote
Lol - I’m not from the suburbs. I’m all the way in rural. I had no idea there were neighborhoods in the top picture.
I-LOVE-TURTLES666 t1_iturz2q wrote
How ironic coming from someone who lives in Cambridge…. Lmao 🤡
IntelligentCicada363 t1_itvf6jl wrote
Yes Cambridge, the suburban utopia. Unlike Boston, Cambridge rioted and stopped the inner belt from being built.
kamui_zangetsu t1_itugz31 wrote
So you’re saying that we should have continued to travel via stagecoaches and wagons?
Ironlining OP t1_itunivb wrote
One word: Trains
toddbr t1_itrl1cj wrote
Huge mistake not building the inner belt and southwest expressway
langjie t1_itrmryf wrote
also should have built something that connected north and south stations
NoMoLerking t1_its1ply wrote
Big dig was the perfect opportunity to connect north and south stations. Even if they didn’t have the stomach for a tram, a dedicated bus lane from north to south through the seaport to the airport would have been great.
smeuse t1_itt0jf5 wrote
Mike Dukakis had a great idea :)
alr12345678 t1_ittg2c6 wrote
like a train??
TheRealBobHall t1_itrwxzu wrote
Yeah, Roxbury didn’t really need to exist anyways (/s in case it wasn’t clear)
toddbr t1_its18i3 wrote
Yeah. Real awful that there’s no highway there to improve access and raise home values. Not sure I need the /s. 😉
Ashamed_Pea6072 t1_itsct7b wrote
You have no idea what you’re talking about. The 93 tunnel essentially goes in at north station and out at south station, it was the perfect opportunity. That’s no where near Roxbury, it would have just been another tunnel under Downtown and North End
TheRealBobHall t1_itsgf6l wrote
Why so hostile? It literally would’ve: https://www.leventhalmap.org/articles/visualizing-change-in-boston-activism-over-time/ I think you’re thinking of the southEAST expressway aka the O’Neill tunnel aka 93. The unbuilt SouthWEST expressway already damaged Roxbury - Melnea Cass is a remnant of the start of that planned but unfinished highway
Ashamed_Pea6072 t1_itsjfjt wrote
Legit my bad, thought your comment was in response to a north/south station connection.
Apologies, have a great evening!
TheRealBobHall t1_ituoda2 wrote
lol all good!
jaygold92 t1_itt2tpl wrote
It will destroy Cambridge and Boston had both projects went through. Which will create a near bronx like level urban decay in the 70s to mid 90s in surrounding areas, plus, crime. At least the state should've improved existing roads, ramps and interchanges after canceling all highways on 128 and inside as well
IntelligentCicada363 t1_itufb67 wrote
It amazes me that anyone could say that the inner belt should have been built. It was so bad that it wasn’t even built during the peak of white flight and highway construction
IntelligentCicada363 t1_ituenkx wrote
Greatest decision Massachusetts ever made to cancel that project.
LetMeSleepNoEleven t1_itrkoyj wrote
I guess this looks to me like 2021 > 1969, unless I’m missing something?
The 1969 expressway is awful.
Edit: Big dig was probably not the best solution but it is a bit better than previous, it seems to me