I-90 Project: Is This The Best We Can Do?
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I-90 Project: Is This The Best We Can Do?

Join CRWA for a free presentation and Q&A to discuss the Allston Multimodal (I-90) Project and alternative design options.

By Charles River Watershed Association

Date and time

Wednesday, June 11 · 6:30 - 8pm EDT

Location

Josephine A. Fiorentino Community Center

123 Antwerp Street Boston, MA 02135

About this event

  • Event lasts 1 hour 30 minutes

The Allston Multimodal Project entails straightening the Mass Pike (I-90), building a new commuter rail stop, and enabling a new neighborhood to be built on what is now an abandoned rail yard.

There is widespread support for the numerous benefits this project can bring, and CRWA is excited about the potential of this project to provide a new commuter rail stop, a wider, safer bike and pedestrian path, more parkland, and more housing in underutilized land. However, there are key areas for improvement, particularly in improving river access and leaving space for parkland and habitat.

Charles River Watershed Association has been a member of the Allston Multimodal Project Task Force since its inception in 2014. We support the overall project goals and believe they can be achieved while protecting the Charles River.



Organized by

Since 1965, Charles River Watershed Association has been the voice of the river. Formed by a group of concerned citizens who raised alarm about the declining health of the Charles River, we are one of the oldest watershed organizations in the country.

In the fifty years since our founding, CRWA has guided the transformation of our river from the “Dirty Water” of the past–rife with industrial pollution, sewage, trash, and even cars–to the Charles River we know and love today, one of the cleanest, most celebrated urban rivers in the country. Today, the Charles River is once again a living river–but the work is far from over. New challenges have emerged that threaten to undermine our progress; climate change, stormwater pollution, and addressing environmental injustice. But we are rising to meet the moment–taking a regional approach to climate solutions, working with nature rather than against it with nature-based solutions, and centering environmental justice–to ensure the collective flourishing of our watershed and all who call it home.

FreeJun 11 · 6:30 PM EDT