Boston's Bridge Too Far: A Logo of Lost ChancesBy Jane Holtz Kay What becomes an icon most? The soaring Brooklyn Bridge and Golden Gate, the glorious, gilded Chrysler Building, the monumental Washington Memorial, the structural elegance of the Eiffel Tower - all are the stuff of urban imagery, working symbols of city life. And yet, for all its history, urbanity, and architecture, Boston has had no such logo. The curved bow of the swan boats won't do. Nor does George Washington astride his horse in the Public Garden make world-class copy. The golden dome of Bulfinch's State House is, well, a dome. As for cloud-reaching height in the Hub, neither the monolithic glass façades of the former John Hancock building (nameless since it went on the market last year) nor the ornate splendor of the 1913 Custom House Tower achieves truly commercial cliché.
In a city that eschews au courant architecture, the widest cable-stayed bridge in the world, at 183 feet, has become a singularly modern symbol. Boasting a lengthy moniker, the Leonard P. Zakim Bunker Hill Bridge honors both a local civil rights activist and a historic locale. More than an incidental artifact of the Big Dig, it makes a picture-perfect, postcard-worthy twenty-first-century logo. And Boston would seem to have embraced Menn's first foray in this country. Illuminated in neon brilliance at night, the asymmetrical bridge with its towering obelisks and triangular stays, draws eyes and sighs from commuters crossing the Charles by rail or on elevated highways. But closer inspection of what the bridge has wrought could change public opinion as time passes. Notwithstanding its soaring imagery, the 10-lane structure makes an awkward and ungainly presence on the ground of post-Big Dig Boston. Despite the bridge's sense of flight, its Piranesian collection of columns and cluttered underworld create a dark scenario, marring the Charles, blighting nearby neighborhoods, and sharply limiting pedestrian access, passage, and comfort on the 40 acres of river park land now being constructed around its base. Surrounded by looping highways, parking lots, vents, and odd-lot structures now and to come, the bridge shrouds the site, scars the soil, and undermines the landscape supposedly freed by the project. "Another place where they'll burn tires," one knowledgeable skeptic predicts.
Most slighting to citizens of America's "walking city," as Boston likes to describe itself, is the sad fact that their first true icon is not walkable. Unlike Rotterdam's new Erasmus Bridge - UN Studio's elegant artifact that boasts lanes for bikers, walkers, and streetcars, as well as automobiles - the Zakim Bridge is a car-only construction. No more bridge walks for Bostonians. No unobstructed parkland. In the end, after years of construction chaos--13 million cubic yards of fill removed, and billions spent--Boston's new emblem is more cosmetic than creditable. This article appeared in Architecture Magazine, Protest column, February 2003.
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