Construction could be tricky and disruptive, too. The cut-off wall would go underneath Berkeley and Chandler Streets in the South End — site of the Chandler Inn and other buildings, along with their attendant underground utilities and other impediments to dropping a wall into the ground. The pumping system must run along Chandler Street and Columbus Avenue, eventually winding to a Follen Street pumping station. This will serve primarily to secure the corridor on the south side of the Turnpike. The Back Bay on the river side — and Beacon Hill, Chinatown, the North End, and Fort Point — will require other plans.
Still, the MBTA’s commitment is a huge step forward — and an acknowledgement that groundwater levels are a major public issue deserving of large-scale solutions. Who will pay for those remains open for argument.
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Topics:
News Features
, Tom Menino, Public Transportation, Transportation, More
, Tom Menino, Public Transportation, Transportation, Daniel Grabauskas, Boston Water & Sewer Commission, Massachusetts Turnpike Authority, Massachusetts Water Resources Authority, Less