
Reclaiming Boston’s “bermuda triangle”, the 690-foot bridge curves under the Zakim Bridge and over the MBTA railway connecting Cambridge to Charlestown with easy access to the North End along a controlled walkway.
The bridge, built by the Massachusetts Department of Transportation and the Department of Conservation and Recreation, is the first of three pedestrian and bicyclist bridges expected to open along the Charles River between the Museum of Science and the Charles River Locks. That stretch has long been known as the “lost half-mile,” because it was home to rail yards, potato sheds, and jail parking lots, making it largely inaccessible for recreational uses.
If the other bridges are completed as planned, they will connect three parks built by the Big Dig: Cambridge’s North Point Park, Charlestown’s Paul Revere Park, and Boston’s Nashua Street Park, forming their own version of an emerald necklace. Bicyclists, joggers, and river walkers will be able to move almost seamlessly between the rest of the river, the Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Greenway, and Boston Harbor.
I was curious about the route and decided to check it out for myself…. (more…)