| Urban Walkability: Learning from Boston |
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| Friday, 30 March 2007 | |
Founded in 1630, Boston is one of the oldest and most culturally significant cities in the United States. It’s also a role model for being a walkable city. Despite being nearly 200 years older and many times as dense, this city offers many pedestrian friendly ideas and concepts Jacksonville should once again embrace. BACKGROUND Boston was established on a peninsula called “Shawmut” on September 17, 1630, by Puritan colonists from England. During the 1770’s it became the epicenter of several early battles leading up to the Revolutionary War. After the war, the city quickly grew to become one of the world’s wealthiest trading ports, partially because it was the closest major American port to Europe. Soon it would evolve to become a major textile production center during the Industrial Revolution. However, like most older dense American cities, Boston began to decline in the 20th Century as the factories became obsolete and businesses moved out of the region for cheaper labor elsewhere. After a period of racial conflict in the 1970s, over desegregation busing, the city has reinvented itself as a center of intellectual, technological, and political ideology. Its successful revitalization has created gentrification issues that have transformed this metropolitan area into having the highest cost of living of any in the country. While that’s a major issue the city faces as it competes for economic development, there’s one thing it truly excels at that we can use a good lesson in. That’s walkability. Statistics: Boston Population 2005: 596,638 (City); 4,411,835 (Metro) - (incorporated in 1630) Jacksonville Pop. 2005: 782,623 (City); 1,248,371 (Metro) - (incorporated in 1832) City population 1940: Jacksonville (173,000); Boston (770,816)
DOWNTOWN Downtown Boston is the site of the financial district, Government Center and Chinatown. It also is where the "Big Dig" (Interstate 93) passes through the historic city. The Custom House Tower is one of the historic landmarks in Boston's Financial District. The original building was completed in 1849. The tower portion was built as an addition between 1913 and 1915.
Downtown Crossing is the urban shopping district in the heart of downtown Boston. It's easy to see that signage is not an issue in this city. Neither is getting people out of their cars.
In addition to the signage, bus shelters are also easy to find. Furthermore, they are income producing due to the advertisements on them.
Faneuil Hall Marketplace, was the first festival marketplace developed by the Rouse Company. Its success led to the development of The Jacksonville Landing and a host of other urban marketplaces across America during the 1980s.
Pocket parks don't have to be actual greenspaces. This one, near Chinatown, is basically an extension of the sidewalk, yet usable due to the businesses facing and embracing it.
BOSTON COMMON Dating as far back as 1634, the Boston Common is the oldest city park in the United States. Originally used for cattle grazing and public hangings, today it serves as a central public gathering space for a diverse amount of uses, both formal and informal.
The Boston Common can be clearly seen in this view from the Prudential Observation Deck. Like Springfield's chain of parks, the Common is bordered by several inner city neighborhoods. Downtown can be seen in the background, Beacon Hill to the left and Back Bay at the bottom of the graphic.
This image captures several residents and visitors relaxing in the Common.
One thing is apparently clear when walking the streets and sidewalks of Boston. Expensive pavers are irrelevant. The next time we plan a public space and the goal is to get the best bang for your buck... remember this.
BACK BAY Back Bay's beginnings date as far back as the mid 19th century. Built on top of fill, the neighborhood's design was influenced by Haussmann's renovation of Paris. Strict regulations produced a uniform and well-integrated architectural scene dominated by brownstones. Today, the district is one of the city's most desired neighborhoods. It's known for it's expensive housing and shopping areas.
An image of the Back Bay district, taken from the Marriott Hotel in Cambridge, MA.
Boylston Street shows that vibrant pedestrian activity is best when buildings open up and incorporate their uses onto the sidewalk. This goes against the concept of demolishing structures for pocket parks that don't interact well with their surroundings. Instead of "greenspaces", the sidewalk itself becomes the center of activity.
Designed by I.M. Pei in 1976, the sleek 790' John Hancock Tower is Boston's tallest building.
The historic Trinity Church in the background. It was constructed as a replacement for an earlier building that burned in the Great Boston Fire of 1872.
Copley Square is a lively spot, not because of grass, but because of the diverse amount of uses taking place around it. Bounded by Clarendon, Boylston, Dartmouth, and St. James Streets, Trinity Church, the Boston Public Library and the John Hancock Tower all open up onto it.
This linear greenway, should give us an idea of what the Hogan's Creek greenway could resemble if more focus is given to making that space a public centerpiece of the urban core.
Another example of building activity embracing the sidewalks, as opposed to turning their backs to the street.
Beacon Hill is a wealthy neighborhood of Federal-style rowhouses, known for its narrow streets, brick sidewalks and gas-lit lamps. It covers approximately one square mile and is home to about 10,000 people.
THE NORTH END Originally settled in the 1630s, the North End is the city's oldest residential community. In the early 20th century, it became the center of the Italian community of Boston. Today the residential district is famous for its selection of bakeries, eateries and Old-world feeling. There are over 100 eating establishments in this 1/2 square mile neighborhood, including one that stays open 24 hours a day, 365 days a year.
Tenement (multi-unit dwellings) architecture is the dominant type in the North End. If you love SUVs and 3 car garages, this isn't the city for you. Here the automobile takes a back seat to the pedestrian. Built upon a former tidal marsh, this district was developed to relieve the crowed downtown and Beacon Hill neighborhoods in the 1870s. Eventually, it would become a center of black middle class Boston life and culture in the early 20th century. Today, the South End is North America's largest extant Victorian residential district and is one of the city's main restaurant districts, offering a diverse mix of cuisines. The South End shows that even with high levels of building density, greenery can still be incorporated into the landscape.
Here, residential units face the sidewalk, along with parallel parking along the street for visitors.
Other "Learning From" photo tours by Metro Jacksonville
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March 30, 2007, 9:04 am
Boston is one of the most amazing cities in the country. If there is any one city in the world I would like to see Jax mimmic, Boston is it.
March 30, 2007, 9:26 am
great job!
Amazing tour - I would love to see Jax incorporate even half of the ideas presented above...
March 30, 2007, 11:09 am
Great job! There is no reason Jaxsonville couldnt develop a similar style. Hopefully our "city planners" read this page.
March 30, 2007, 11:17 am
Wow!
This was one of the best ones I've seen on this site - Nice Job!
March 30, 2007, 12:56 pm
vacation...
I could save a lot of money if I just quit going on vacation each year and just take the photo tours on this site
March 30, 2007, 1:23 pm
Expensive Pavers?
One comment above referred to "Expensive pavers are irrelevant." Can you elaborate on this point? I do not understand the context. Are you inferring that the city wishes to spend mega-bucks on the best sidewalks/trails money can buy, while Boston's version is more cost-effective and gets the job done?
Thanks!
March 30, 2007, 2:04 pm
You don't need tto be rich to stimulate vibrancy...
If you've ever sat through any public meetings involving streetscapes and public spaces, the idea that sidewalks have to be expensively designed is always present. However, in many cities (including Boston) you'll notice that you can get by with the regular basics...plain concrete slabs for sidewalks and asphalt for jogging paths.
The excitement and vibrancy of these spaces come from the diverse amount of activities around them, not from what the sidewalks look like. So in a budget minded world, this means historically we may have spent too much money on things that really don't matter in the grand scheme of things.
March 30, 2007, 8:43 pm
One thing I felt should also be mentioned
great job on this photo tour, as with all other photo tours I've had the time to look at.
i just think it should be pointed out that one of the reasons boston is such a pedestrian-friendly city is due to the great public transit system they have in place. granted, downtown boston is relatively small and can easily be walked, public transportation (called 'the T') is a cheap and, for the most part, efficient way to get where you need to go. one of the things that struck me when i came to jax was the lack of a strong public transportation system. i tried to take the bus but there were no schedules at the bus stop and there was no map on jta's website (i think they have since added this feature), so, being unfamiliar with the city, i wasnt sure where i would end up and instead opted to just drive.
thankfully this site has lead me to believe that jacksonville may actually become the city it has the potential to be. improvements are being made, such as the new jta airport express bus, but theres still a lot of work to be done
March 31, 2007, 8:46 am
Boston
Wonderful walking tour, and excellent observations about pedestrian- friendly Boston...But Sean's comments above, about the "T" can't be underestimated. Having lived in Brookline (a next door neighbor to Boston), I can safely say that driving into Boston, from my home, was just unthinkable. The "T" brought everyone in from surrounding towns easily and for a low price...and once there, you walked everywhere. From store to restaurant to museum.
Building a rail system, to draw people into the downtown area, would certainly be an expensive and enormous undertaking....but I suspect it would be worth it, in the long run, if you want to make the downtown area a destination.
April 1, 2007, 7:18 pm
Our city is nice too!
I understand the the "learning from" threads between cities are made to compare or whatever; IMO Boston and Jax don't have much in common, and that's not a bad thing for Jax IMO. Granted, I never been to Boston put the first thing I think of about Boston is Historical sites, crappy weather, and New England clam chowder. IMO it's easy to highlight a city by showing pics; It's not like J-ville don't have nice areas, but you wouldn't know that because everyone tends to overreact in thinking that Boston is perfect. I wouldn't won't for J-ville to imitate any city; It's good to stay orignal.
April 1, 2007, 10:58 pm
Jax is a drive by city. You go threw it to get to some place else. Stop trying to make it something it isn't.
April 2, 2007, 12:58 am
That's your opinion; I'm sorry for having mine. Gimme a break, where I would rather live Jax, or Boston. Oh, I'm struggling with that decision. Maybe you're trying to make out Boston to be something it's not.
April 2, 2007, 1:23 am
Learning from Paducah
I'm ready for the moderator to make a "Learning from Paducah" thread. Maybe yall can post some pics of Wal-Mart in Paducah, KY next to a retention pond. Maybe that's better than Jax too!!! Half of these pics of other cities looks very similar to Avondale, Five Points, or Northbank riverwalk, but yet our city always unfairly put behind the 8 ball. Accrording to most people, everything gotta be downtown crowded with people with buildings like Saks, Bvgari, and Tiffany's all jammed up in a one block area. Yeah, that's what everyone should envision the greatest city to be!!! God forbid if you put something in the suburbs. Oh no, no,no,no,no,no. Everything gotta be DT. I'm not trying to make Jax out to be perfect, but damn it's not that bad outside of the "tunnel vision dreams of upscale department stores and restaurants at DT'" It's like yin and yang, somebody gotta stick up for J-ville, and it's me.
April 2, 2007, 4:37 am
Downtown is lacking
The problem here isn't the suburbs, and I dont think anyone has begrudged you that. The problem is, there is no density in the Core, and that is what MetroJax primarily focuses on... downtown development. If you want to go start a group that focus' on suburban development, sprawl, and strip malls, Im sure we will all check in to see whats going on from time to time.
Hell, the city hired the biggest suburban developer around (Ben Carter) to help focus on downtown... so clearly suburban visioning isn't the problem here.
April 2, 2007, 4:40 am
Oh, and...
I am very familiar with Boston. I grew up in the suburbs of Boston....
Great schools, commuter rail to the city, historical sites, and museums mean Jax doesn't hold a candle to Boston in the suburban dept either.
http://www.mbta.com/schedules_and_maps/rail/
April 2, 2007, 8:09 am
Holding a candle
Sure, and Boston doesn't hold a candle to New York; I lived there for nine years, and I still rather be here in Jax. I can imagine that Boston is a great city, but I'd never live there; I'd like to visit someday though.
April 2, 2007, 9:00 am
I think you're missing the point of the "Learning From" articles...
While Jacksonville has all the potential in the world, its no debate that we, as a city, are still struggling to find the correct way to bring economic revitalization back to the core. What good is a city shaped and operating like a donut? Full of life on the edges, but a black hole in the middle. Why can't we have the best of both worlds, in terms of urbanism and suburbanism?
Many of the urban redevelopment strategies and visions Jacksonville leaders have promoted in the past have been tried and tested in some form by other municipalities. The "Learning From" threads visually showcase what other cities have done and to what degree the level of success or failure has been. It gives us a chance to evaluate these concepts without spending millions upfront on things that might be proven failures, based off history.
So, they're not such much about jealousy and competition, as they are about illustrating successful redevelopment strategies that will help strengthen our own inner city core in an affordable manner.
April 2, 2007, 12:32 pm
Jax bashing continues
Lake, how come you're one of the few people that critiques Jax fairly when comparing to other cities, without bashing the hell outta J-ville? Why don't more peeps take your approach? No one says anything when Jax is bashed , and yes it does, gets bashed constantly. Everyone just lets"bashing Jax" slide everytime. In contrast the "learning from" city is the best city in the planet. God forbid if anyone say anything critical about that city. I'm gonna continue to be very unpopular around here for sticking up for my city when it gets bashed; That's a shame because we're right here in Jax.
April 2, 2007, 1:08 pm
All I want is Jax to become the best it can be
I-10 east, I look at it from the point of view that neither ignoring the issues on one end, or ultimate bashing, on the other, will get things changed. Only acknowledging the areas in which we can enhance our city and properly addressing them will make Jax a better place. Showing how other places have dealt with issues we working on now was the intent for the "Learning From" articles posted and the ones to come in the future.
I assume the "bashing" happens because people are frustrated that our leaders for whatever reason, refuses to do the simple things that have worked to a high degree in other places across the country. However, in this thread, I haven't seen much bashing, only observations on areas in which we can work to improve.
Also, check out the Tampa and Houston Learning from threads. Both of those places offered a few examples of things that we should avoid.
Houston: http://www.metrojacksonville.com/content/view/196/77/
Tampa: http://www.metrojacksonville.com/content/view/287/77/
April 2, 2007, 3:21 pm
I-10. Jacksonville is my home. I think we tend be hardest on those we love. I believe we can save the core, or else I wouldn't have picked up my family and moved to Springfield. There are many inconveniences that I am willing to work around for the sake of bettering my neighborhood and my city.
Boston is special in many many ways, but it also has its problems. They also have GOBs. Just look at the Big Dig. The keep putting Ted Kennedy and John Kerry in Office, and dont even get me started on Barney Frank or Mayor Menino.
The cost of living is outragous, and the roads are impossible. There is almost NO direct routes. You want to go to the Cape? Thats a nice 4 hour drive, and and god help you if you want to buy beer on Sundays, you have to drive within 15 miles of the NH boarder.
If I wanted to drive into the city, I had to take RT2 in. Somewhere near Concord/Lincoln border, Rt 2 takes a hard right hand turn... A FOUR LANE HIGHWAY HAS A STOP LIGHT AND THEN TURNS RIGHT! Then you really dont want to drive into the city because you wont find a parking spot, and if you do, you will get plowed in, ticketed, and booted before you can actually park the car!!!
Ice, salt, and a##hole drivers make the cost of insurance and upkeep on your car huge.
Oh, and there is a tax on everything. Excise tax, road tax, permit tax, building tax, sales tax, dine in tax, carry out tax... Oh, and the best (almost the only) east-west thourough fare in the state IS A TOLL ROAD!
Boston is a phenomenal city that has its own crosses to bare. But at the end of the day, we can learn a lot from other vibrant areas.
Oh, and I know you were kidding about Paducah, but it actually looks like a pretty little town.
http://www.redbudtours.net/pics/paducah_014.jpg
and I am certain we could learn something from them. http://paducahky.gov/city/planning/special_projects/documents/RiverConcept1Zoomweb.pdf
They update their comprehensive plan every 5 years, rather than 10 like http://paducahky.gov/city/planning/special_projects/documents/RiverConcept2Zoomweb.pdf
April 2, 2007, 5:24 pm
jax bashing
i think there is a good deal of jax bashing here, but i think a good deal of it comes from people who are either frustrated with the city or dont know much about it. i know when i first moved here last year i told everyone that there was nothing to do in jacksonville. of course this isnt true, but there weren't things that were immediately available to me like i was used to in other cities. there arent museums here that people come from across the country to visit. there arent a lot of things downtown that people from outside of jacksonville think of when they think of jacksonville (outside of the jags maybe). that said, there are lots of interesting things to do downtown, but in my experience i had to do a little more searching to find places to go than i did in other cities.
downtownparks' comments about boston are true - there is a lot of corruption and idiotic planning there. putting that aside, there were enough people there who got their sh&$ together and enough is done to counteract the negative things. there are lots of famous museums, good sports teams and venues, successful downtown retail and dining, and, as the photo tour shows, pedestrian-friendly areas.
despite a huge debt, the T has continued to invest money in new projects (in part because they had to meet the american disabilities act) to improve service and become more tourist friendly.
i think jacksonville could do well by looking at other cities. boston has a lot of negatives, yet it is still a fantastic place to visit and live. jacksonville has room to grow, beautiful beaches close by, great weather, and a lot of other things going for it. i think that contributes to the growing frustration with jacksonville - most people think the area should be doing 'better' than it is. however, thats not to say it isnt good or improving
April 2, 2007, 9:52 pm
My bad guys
I was the only one doing the bashing of Boston in frustration to all the bashing of J-ville I've seen on MetroJacksonville. Lake, DTP, and Sean brought out some good points concerning what Jax could do to better the city. Im sorry for bashing Boston BTW, a city I never have been to before. If you look at forums all over this country similar "interbashing" occurs in many cities like I saw some from Charlotte, and Tampa. I understand that peeps are mad with non-progressive local governments etc. I'll try to hold my tongue if someone bash J-ville. BTW, DTP we really have a 'Learning from Paducah" thread; That's what I get for trying to be funny. LOL. I guess I oughta check it out.
April 5, 2007, 9:39 am
Comparing Apples and Oranges
Having spent a summer at Harvard, I think it is safe to say that the people of Boston are the most unfriendly and worst driving folks I have ever seen. Public Transportation there is wonderful and was laid out for the most part, pre-autormobile.
Jacksonville has a different path to walk. Our local government is better than the ingrained ethnic governments surrounding Boston. We did not have the racial problems of Boston even though these continue to be a concern in Jacksonville. And of course, we do not have the "investement" community that Boston has.
But, we have good weather year round-great beaches-reasonably decent shopping- much better behaved football fans- and for the most part, a really good quality of life. A quality of life that someone living in a triplex in Cambridge or Charlestown would take in a minute.
They do have the Red Sox though. Not sure their pops or symphony on any given night is better than ours. Their colleges might be considered a tad better!!!!! But, ever been in Boston in January?
I think we do well to learn from other cities, but need to chart our own path.
April 5, 2007, 10:11 am
I think you guys are missing the point of this series...
The point of this series is not to show how we can "be" Boston or "be" Chicago. We're not trying to say that we should create Savannah's park system downtown or implement Boston's "Big Dig".
The point is that in every city, there are aspects of their urban environment that we can learn from. For example, one of the things demonstrated is that fancy pavers are no more functional than asphault, and are a lot more expensive.
We should never try to be another city, or the "Hardford of the South" like we were called in the 60's and 70's when we had all of the insurance companies. We should be us, but you should always look at other cities to see if there are some examples. For example, find me a successful Bus Rapis Transit system in the United States - good luck. Now, show me an example of a successful commuter rail system in America - not hard at all (Austin, Miami, Nashville, Chicago, Santa Fe, San Diego, coming soon to Orlando, and the list goes on). That tells me that commuter rail is something we should investigate.
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