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  • Hardening of the Greenway

    GLOBE EDITORIAL

    Hardening of the Greenway

    September 24, 2007

    THE FIRST PARK parcel dedicated on the Rose Kennedy Greenway isn't a
    park in the conventional sense, but a plaza intended to serve as a
    gateway to Chinatown and a venue for dragon dances and other festive
    events. Chinatown residents wanted a plaza of decorative - but very
    hard - concrete with two raised swaths of greenery. That's what they
    got when it opened Sept. 12.

    A different kind of hardening is taking place farther to the north in
    the central core of the Greenway, on a small parcel between the North
    End and Faneuil Hall Marketplace. If the Armenian Heritage Foundation
    gets its way, a memorial will be established that will be harder to
    alter than all the concrete in the Chinatown park.

    A neighborhood meeting in the North End Wednesday laid out the
    difficulties of designing this space. Less than half an acre in size,
    it is supposed to be the pedestrian link between the new wharf
    district parks to the south, the existing Christopher Columbus Park,
    the North End, Quincy Market, and the proposed Boston Museum to the
    north.

    People at the meeting were happy that plans for the parcel no longer
    included a building, as originally envisioned several years ago. They
    wanted green space, even though the North End will soon have the
    benefit of two new parks facing Hanover Street just north of the
    museum site. These are scheduled to open in October.

    The Turnpike Authority is in charge of building all the Greenway
    parks, mainly because it had control of the space as it oversaw
    construction of the Central Artery tunnels, and because the City of
    Boston ducked an opportunity to take over the greenway once the artery
    was finished. In 2000, the Legislature ordered the authority to find a
    spot for the Armenian memorial somewhere in Boston, and with North End
    residents clamoring for a park on Parcel 13, it seemed a logical
    choice, especially since the Armenian Heritage Foundation would pay to
    build it.

    But in June, Ian Bowles, the state secretary of energy and
    environmental affairs, said that the authority hadn't followed the
    proper procedures in selecting the foundation for the site, so the
    community meeting was held last week as part of a new approval
    process.

    Based on remarks Wednesday, neighborhood residents like the memorial
    concept, which would create a labyrinth in the center of the park
    flanked by benches, a fountain, and an abstract sculpture
    commemorating the Armenian genocide. Some thought it would be
    attractive to children, others thought it would be a place for
    reflection, and no one spoke in opposition.

    Somewhere in Boston, there ought to be a remembrance of this act of
    mass murder against Armenians in what is now Turkey. This need is
    highlighted by the recent controversy over the refusal by the
    Anti-Defamation League to acknowledge the genocide. (The national ADL
    director changed his mind after protests by Armenian-Americans.) But
    the issue of siting is another question. Parcel 13 is not the place
    for this memorial.

    As the Rose Kennedy Greenway Conservancy suggests, an Armenian
    memorial would set a bad precedent for any other groups that might
    want to put their stamp on the Greenway. The conservancy, which will
    take over maintenance of the parks in a few years, wants these open
    spaces welcoming to everyone, not divided into enclaves.

    There's another reason to look twice at the proposal. For all the
    support it has initially gathered, no one knows how the park on Parcel
    13 will really be used, and how the Armenian Heritage Foundation
    proposal will complement those uses. Will children play on the
    labyrinth, or will it be just a shortcut from the North End to
    downtown Boston? Will the proposed dodecahedron-shaped sculpture have
    enduring appeal or come to be widely disliked?

    How will the memorial fit in with the abutting Boston Museum, an
    ambitious project to commemorate the history of eastern New England
    that requires enormous amounts of fund-raising? And if that doesn't
    get built, what will replace it, and how will Parcel 13 jibe with this
    alternative use? Once the foundation invests money and emotion into
    this site, is it reasonable to expect it would welcome any changes?

    Nobody was asking these questions at the meeting Wednesday. The
    Turnpike Authority, the Boston Redevelopment Authority, and the
    Mayor's Artery Completion Task Force are trying to devise a compromise
    that will let the foundation build the park, but deemphasize some of
    the Armenian elements. Before they strike a deal, they all ought to
    remember that Parcel 13 and all the surrounding open spaces are a work
    in progress. No agreement should prohibit the park from a
    reconfiguration years or decades in the future if changes will result
    in a better Greenway.

    The Chinatown Park, with its durable surface, seems set for eternity,
    and it is well designed to serve as a formal meeting space for the
    community. But perhaps at some point the neighbors will prefer a more
    conventional park. In the 1980s, the city took jackhammers to Copley
    Square to replace a hard, sunken pit with a greener space. Closer to
    Parcel 13, Christopher Columbus Park was rebuilt seven years ago to
    make it more inviting. Parks are meant to evolve, and there are no
    open spaces in greater flux than those at the heart of the Greenway,
    just where Parcel 13 is located. The Armenian genocide should be
    commemorated unambiguously in Boston. Just not here.

    (c) Copyright 2007 The New York Times Company

    Source: http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion /editorials/articles/2007/09/24/hardening_of_the_g reenway/
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