WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--From the Emerald Necklace to the Freedom Trail Sites, Boston’s green spaces are revered by tourists and locals alike. The Landscape Architect’s Guide to Boston, launched today by the American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA), offers insider information about these designed landscapes and others you may not have heard of. It is located at www.asla.org/boston.
Twelve million people visit Boston annually, but most of those visitors possess only a rudimentary knowledge of the city’s landscapes and restrict their travel to the well-established tourist routes. With a tap of their smartphones, people can deepen their knowledge through expert commentary and more than 1,100 photos provided by 28 landscape architects.
Thomas R. Tavella, FASLA, president of ASLA, says that the guide is the first-ever website that describes 100 historic, modern and contemporary landscapes in Boston, Cambridge and Brookline—and explains why they captivate. It highlights historic monuments and parks and examples of new sustainable works—including Raymond V. Mellone Park, a cutting-edge park that also manages stormwater, and Condor Street Urban Wild, which caps toxic soils to create a new wildlife habitat and urban respite.
“This guide will answer questions you didn’t know you had about your favorite neighborhood parks and other landscapes,” says Tavella. “Boston’s vibrant public realm didn’t just magically appear but was carefully designed over the years, and is continually evolving, through interactions among elected leaders, communities and landscape architects.”
Boston has long been a trendsetter when it comes to urban design and sustainability. Its landscape architects have played a crucial role in making the city a better place to live, starting in the late 19th century, when Frederick Law Olmsted designed the Emerald Necklace, to today's generation of landscape architects who are creating waterfront parks and beloved green spaces. Boston ranks in the top 10 nationally for sustainability, park space and quality of life, in large part because its designed landscapes are integral to its urban fabric.
The guide is divided into 26 distinct tours in diverse neighborhoods in Boston, Cambridge and Brookline. Each tour covers multiple neighborhoods, and includes a printable walking or biking map for easy exploration.
The guide was created by ASLA in partnership with 28 nationally recognized landscape architects, all of whom are designers of the public realm and leaders in sustainable design. The guides were asked to explain the sites from a landscape architect’s point of view and show how the design of these sites influences how people interact with or even feel about these places.
The guides are:
- Cathy Baker-Eclipse, ASLA, Boston Parks and Recreation Department
- Maria Bellalta, ASLA, Boston Architectural College
- Deneen Crosby, ASLA, Crosby | Schlessinger | Smallridge
- Melissa Desjardins, ASLA, Dan Gordon Associates
- Joe Geller, FASLA, Stantec Consulting
- Lynne Giesecke, ASLA, Studio2112 Landscape Architecture
- John Haven, ASLA, Keith LeBlanc Landscape Architecture
- Gary Hilderbrand, FASLA, Reed Hilderbrand
- Carol Johnson, FASLA, Carol R. Johnson Associates
- Cortney Kirk, ASLA, Copley Wolff Design Group
- Mary Lydecker, ASLA, Hargreaves Associates
- Bill Madden, ASLA, Mikyoung Kim Design
- Jeremy Martin, ASLA, Hargreaves Associates
- Kaki Martin, ASLA, Klopfer Martin Design Group
- Grace Ng, Student ASLA, Olmsted Center for Landscape Preservation, National Park Service
- Marion Pressley, FASLA, Pressley Associates Landscape Architects
- Robyn Reed, ASLA, Landworks Studio
- Susannah Ross, ASLA, Sasaki
- James Royce, ASLA, Studio2112 Landscape Architecture
- Michael Sadler, ASLA, Boston Architectural College
- JP Shadley, FASLA, Shadley Associates Landscape Architects
- Cynthia Smith, FASLA, Halvorson Design Partnership
- Laura Solano, ASLA, Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates
- Laura Tenny, ASLA, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- Kenya Thompson, ASLA, Boston Redevelopment Authority
- Jennifer Toole, ASLA, Toole Design Group
- Robert Uhlig, ASLA, Halvorson Design Partnership
- Gabrielle Weiss, Copley Wolff Design Group
Media wishing to interview the guides or learn more about the website should contact Karen Grajales, public relations manager, at ktgrajales@asla.org or (202) 216-2371. Images are available here. Please refer to the image titles for credit information.
List of Sites Featured in the Guide |
|||
Back Bay |
Financial District / Government Center |
||
Copley Square | Granary Burying Ground | ||
First Church | King’s Chapel Burying Ground | ||
City Hall Plaza | |||
Boston / Cambridge Bike Network |
The Garden of Peace | ||
Faneuil Hall Marketplace | |||
Brookline |
Christopher Columbus Waterfront Park | ||
Fairsted, Frederick Law Olmsted National Historic | Long Wharf | ||
Site | Central Wharf Plaza | ||
Post Office Square Park | |||
Cambridge |
|||
Cambridge Commons |
Harbor Islands |
||
John F. Kennedy Memorial Park | Georges Island | ||
Longfellow House | Little Brewster Island and Boston Light | ||
Mount Auburn Cemetery | Peddocks Island | ||
Spectacle Island | |||
Cambridge: Harvard University |
|||
Harvard Yard |
Jamaica Plain |
||
The Plaza | South Street Mall | ||
Tanner Fountain | Allandale Woods | ||
LISE and Science Center Courtyards | |||
Northwest Laboratory Courtyard |
Lower Alston |
||
Rockefeller Hall | Raymond V. Mellone Park | ||
Cabot Courtyard and Frisbie Place | |||
Mission Hill |
|||
Cambridge: MIT |
Levinson Plaza | ||
Ray and Maria Stata Center Landscape | Kevin W. Fitzgerald Park | ||
North Court and Main Street | |||
MIT's Public Art Collection |
North End |
||
Killian Court | Paul Revere House Plaza and North Square | ||
The Prado | |||
Charlestown |
Copp's Hill Burying Ground and Terrace | ||
Bunker Hill Monument | |||
John Harvard Mall |
Public Alleys Bicycle Tour |
||
City Square Park | |||
The Harborwalk |
Rose F. Kennedy Greenway |
||
Charlestown Navy Yard | Chinatown Park | ||
Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital | Dewey Square | ||
Fort Point Channel Parks and Urban Arboretum | |||
Charles River |
Wharf District Parks | ||
Charles River Esplanade | Armenian Heritage Park | ||
Nashua Street Park | North End Parks | ||
Lechmere Canal Park | |||
North Point Park |
Roslindale |
||
Paul Revere Park | Forest Hills Cemetery | ||
Dorchester |
Roxbury |
||
JFK Presidential Library and Museum | Cedar Street Gardens | ||
Pope John Paul II Park | Highland Park and Fort Hill | ||
Malcolm X Park |
|||
East Boston |
Horatio Harris Park | ||
East Boston Greenway | Puddingstone Garden | ||
Piers Park | |||
HarborArts |
Southwest Corridor Park |
||
Condor Street Urban Wild | Southwest Corridor Park | ||
Emerald Necklace |
South Boston |
||
Boston Common | Fort Point Channel and Boston Children's Museum | ||
Boston Public Garden | South Boston Waterfront | ||
Commonwealth Avenue Mall | Pleasure Bay and Castle Island | ||
Back Bay Fens | Broadway | ||
The Riverway | William Day Boulevard and Carson Beach | ||
Olmsted Park | Harborwalk | ||
Jamaica Pond | |||
Arnold Arboretum at Harvard University |
South End |
||
Franklin Park | Harriet Tubman Park | ||
Berkeley Community Garden | |||
Fenway / Kenmore |
LandWave | ||
Fenway Park and Yawkey Way | Blackstone Square and Franklin Square | ||
Fenway Victory Gardens | |||
The Robert McBride House |
West Roxbury |
||
Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum Courtyard | Millennium Park | ||
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston | Brook Farm | ||
Christian Science Center Plaza | |||
The Boston guide is the second produced by ASLA. The Landscape Architect’s Guide to Washington, D.C. was launched last year and so far has received more than 100,000 page views.
About the American Society of Landscape Architects
Founded in 1899, the American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA) is the national professional association for landscape architects, representing more than 15,000 members in 49 professional chapters and 76 student chapters. The Society's mission is to lead, to educate and to participate in the careful stewardship, wise planning and artful design of our cultural and natural environments. Members of the Society use the “ASLA” suffix after their names to denote membership and their commitment to the highest ethical standards of the profession.