Previously, in a notoriously lengthy project known as the Big Dig, Boston had relocated its elevated Central Artery underground, alleviating severe congestion and reclaiming land for precious open space downtown. In 2013, the state began planning to replace the dilapidated viaduct that elevated Interstate 90 through the Allston neighborhood, about three miles west of downtown. Key to the project is a half-mile section known as “the throat,” where I-90, a surface road, two commuter rail lines, and a bicycle and pedestrian path all converge next to the Charles River. Upgrading this infrastructure, an estimated $1.9 billion project, offers the potential to improve bicycle and pedestrian routes; vastly improve access to the waterfront; and redevelop part of Beacon Park Yard, an approximately 100-acre site along the riverside owned by Harvard University.
These community advocacy groups influenced Boston’s biggest project since the Big Dig



