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Boston City Hall

Coordinates:42°21′37.16″N71°3′28.68″W / 42.3603222°N 71.0579667°W /42.3603222; -71.0579667
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

City hall of Boston, Massachusetts

Boston City Hall
The building in 2025
Map
Interactive map of Boston City Hall
General information
Architectural styleBrutalist
Location1 City Hall Square
Boston,Massachusetts, U.S.
Coordinates42°21′37.16″N71°3′28.68″W / 42.3603222°N 71.0579667°W /42.3603222; -71.0579667
Construction started1963; 62 years ago (1963)
Completed1968; 57 years ago (1968)
InauguratedFebruary 10, 1969[1]
Design and construction
Architects
Structural engineerLeMessurier Consultants
Other information
Public transit access Blue Line  Green Line  Orange Line 
Website
Official website

Boston City Hall is the seat ofcity government ofBoston,Massachusetts. It includes the offices of themayor of Boston and theBoston City Council. The current hall was built in 1968 to assume the functions of theOld City Hall.[2]

It is a controversial and prominent example ofBrutalist architecture, part of themodernist movement.[3][4] It was designed by the architecture firmsKallmann McKinnell & Knowles andCampbell, Aldrich & Nulty, withLeMessurier Consultants as engineers.[5][6][7]

Together with the surroundingplaza, City Hall is part of theGovernment Center complex. This project was part of a major urban redesign effort in the 1960s that involved demolishing housing and businesses.

The building has been subject to widespread public condemnation and is sometimes called one of the world's ugliest buildings. Calls for the structure to be demolished have been regularly made even before construction was finished.[8] Architects and critics considered it to be excellent work, with one poll from 1976 finding that professional architects describe Boston City Hall as one of the ten proudest achievements of American architecture.[9] The building is a designatedBoston Landmark.

Design

[edit]
GovernorChub Peabody and MayorJohn F. Collins at the building's groundbreaking
City Hall construction,c. 1960s
Boston City Hall,c. 1968
Boston City Hall's interior courtyard in 1981
An aerial view of Boston City Hall in 2019

Boston City Hall was designed byGerhard Kallmann, aColumbia University professor,[2] andMichael McKinnell, a Columbia graduate student[2] who co-foundedKallmann McKinnell & Knowles. In 1962, they won an international, two-stage design competition for the building.[10] Their design, selected from 256 entries by a jury of prominent architects and businessmen, departed from the more conventional designs of most of the other entries (typified by pure geometrical forms clad with sleek curtain walls) to introduce an articulated structure that expressed the internal functions of the buildings in rugged, cantilevered concrete forms.[11] While hovering over the broad brick plaza, the City Hall was designed to create an open and accessible place for the city's government, with the most heavily used public activities all located on the lower levels directly connected to the plaza. The major civic spaces, including the Council chamber, library, and Mayor's office, were one level up, and the administrative offices were housed above these, behind the repetitive brackets of the top floors.[citation needed]

At a time when monumentality was typically considered an appropriate attribute for governmental architecture, the architects sought to create a bold statement of modern civic democracy, placed within the historic city of Boston. While the architects looked to precedents byLe Corbusier, especially the monastery ofSainte Marie de La Tourette, with its cantilevered upper floors, exposed concrete structure, and a similar interpretation of public and private spaces, they also drew from the example of Medieval and Renaissance Italian town halls and public spaces, as well as from the bold granite structures of 19th-century Boston (includingAlexander Parris'Quincy Market immediately to the east).[12]

Many of the elements in the design have been seen as abstractions of classical design elements, such as the coffers and the architrave above the concrete columns. Kallmann, McKinnell, and Knowles collaborated with two other Boston architectural firms and one engineering firm to form the "Architects and Engineers for the Boston City Hall" as the entity responsible for construction, which took place from 1963 to 1968.

The architects designed City Hall as divided into three sections, aesthetically and also by use. The lowest portion of the building, the brick-faced base, which is partially built into a hillside, consists of four levels of the departments of city government, where the public has wide access. The brick largely transfers over to the exterior of this section, and it is joined by materials such as quarry tile inside. The use of these terra cotta products relates to the building's location on one of the original slopes of Boston, expressed in the open, brick-paved plaza, and also to historic Boston's brick architecture, seen in the adjoining Sears Crescent block and the Blackstone Block buildings across Congress Street.

The intermediate portion of City Hall houses the public elected officials: the Mayor, the City Council members, and the Council Chamber. The large scale and the protrusion of these interior spaces on the outside, instead of being buried deep within the building, reveal the important public functions to the passers-by and are intended to create a visual and symbolic connection between the city and its government. The effect is of a small city of concrete-sheltered structures cantilevered above the plaza: large forms that house important civic activities. The cantilevers are supported by exterior columns, spaced alternately at 14-foot-4-inch (4.37 m) and 28-foot-8-inch (8.74 m), which are steel-reinforced.

The upper stories contain the city's office space, which are used by civil servants not visited frequently by the public, such as the administrative and planning departments. The bureaucratic nature is reflected in the standardized window patterns, separated by pre-cast concrete fins, with an open office plan typical of modern office buildings. (The subsequent enclosure of much of this space into separate offices contributed to the ventilation problems of those floors.)

The top of the brick base was designed as an elevated courtyard melding the fourth floor of the city hall with the plaza. Security concerns caused city officials in recent years to block access to the courtyard and the outdoor stairways toCongress Street and the plaza. The courtyard is occasionally opened up for events (such as the celebration of the Boston Celtics championship in 1986). After theSeptember 11 attacks in 2001, security was further increased. The north entrance, facing the plaza, was barricaded withjersey barriers and bicycle racks. All visitors entering the front and the back entrances must pass through metal detectors.

City Hall was constructed by using mainly cast-in-place and precastPortland cement concrete and some masonry. About half of the concrete used in the building was precast (roughly 22,000 separate components), and the other half was poured-in-place concrete. All of the concrete in the structure, except that of the columns, is mixed with a light, coarse rock. While the majority of the building is created using concrete, precast and poured-in-place concrete are distinguishable by their different colors and textures. For example, cast-in-place elements are coarse and grainy textured because the concrete was poured into fir wood frames to mold it, and precast elements, such as trusses and supports, were set in steel molds to gain smooth, clean surfaces. This distinction also originates from the different types of cement used: the exterior poured-in-place pieces are of type I cement, a lightly colored cement, while the exterior precast components use type II cement, a dark-colored cement. The base of the building is dark with brick, Welsh quarry tiles, mahogany walls, and darker concrete. As the building ascends, the overall color lightens, as lighter concrete is used.

Reception

[edit]

The public response to Boston City Hall continues to be sharply divided. Arguments for and against continued use of the structure provoke strong counter-arguments from politicians, local press, design professionals, and the general public. City Hall was given two stars by theMichelin Green Guide, which said that the building "has been one of Boston's controversial architectural statements since its completion in 1968."[13] The building's 50th anniversary in 2019 prompted both positive and negative commentary.[14] In the2021 Boston mayoral election, candidates for mayorAndrea Campbell,John Barros, andKim Janey voiced negative opinions on it,Annissa Essaibi George was neutral on it, whileMichelle Wu voiced positive opinions on it.[15]

Positive

[edit]

While assessment of the building's architecture has been influenced by the vagaries of changing architectural style, the building at the time was acclaimed by some architects as well as by the professional association,American Institute of Architects, which gave the building its Honor Award in 1969.[16]

Representative of the contemporary praise was the opinion ofThe New York Times criticAda Louise Huxtable, who wrote that "in this focal building Boston sought, and got, excellence."[17] HistorianWalter Muir Whitehill wrote that

it is as fine a building for its time and place as Boston has ever produced. Traditionalists who long for a revival ofBulfinch simply do not realize that one does not achieve a handsome monster either by enlarging, or endlessly multiplying, the attractive elements of smaller structures.[18]

Architect, educator, and writerDonlyn Lyndon wrote inThe Boston Globe, "Boston City Hall carries an authority that results from the clarity, articulation, and intensity of imagination with which it has been formed."[19] Architectural historian Douglass Shand-Tucci, author ofBuilt in Boston: City and Suburb, 1800–2000, called City Hall "one of America's foremost landmarks" and "arguably the great building of twentieth-century Boston." In theAIA Guide to Boston, Susan and Michael Southworth wrote that "the award-winning City Hall had established its architect's reputation and inspired similar buildings across the nation."[20]

Stylistically, City Hall is considered by some to be a leading example ofBrutalist architecture. It is listed among the "Greatest Buildings" by Great Buildings Online, an affiliate ofArchitecture Week.[21] Additionally, in a 1976 Bicentennial poll of historians and architects regarding the United States' greatest buildings, sponsored by the American Institute of Architects, Boston City Hall received the sixth-most mentions.

When Boston's MayorMenino stirred controversy in 2010 with a discussion of selling City Hall (see below), opponents of the proposal expressed praise of the building for its influence, design originality, and symbolism as a marker of Boston's rebirth in the 1960s. Supporters of the building applied to theBoston Landmarks Commission for its designation as a landmark, with supporting signatures and letters from architecture criticJane Holtz Kay, Friends of the Public Garden President Henry Lee, and others.[22]The Boston Globe published editorials recognizing the building's importance. Architecture critic Ada Louise Huxtable wrote an article published inThe Wall Street Journal[23] in which she contrasted the poor treatment of Boston City Hall withYale University's recent sympathetic restoration of its similarly challenging Brutalist landmark, theArt and Architecture Building by architectPaul Rudolph.

In 2009 a major exhibition of the original design drawings for City Hall, now part of the archive of Historic New England, was mounted at the Wentworth Institute of Technology.[24] In 2015, Boston Globe columnist Dante Ramos wrote that "if we see the enduring value in Heroic-era architecture, we can also hope for a measure of boldness — and recognize the downside of being too timid."[25] In 2018, Boston Magazine ranked City Hall as #1 on its list of the 100 best buildings in the city.[26] A 2019 essay by Anthony Flint argued that City Hall is "an elegant, successful work of architecture."[27] In 2019, a commemorative pin was produced in honor of the building's 50th anniversary.[28] In an essay written during the anniversary year, architectAaron Betsky wrote that City Hall "is one of the last concrete examples of government willing to fight for what it thinks is right, which is, or should be, or common good."[29]

Negative

[edit]

City Hall is so ugly that its insane upside-down wedding-cake columns and windsweptplaza distract from the building's true offense. Its great crime isn't being ugly; it's being anti-urban. The building and its plaza keep a crowded city at arm's length.

Paul McMorrow (columnist),The Boston Globe, 2013[30]

Popular news media considers City Hall the "world's ugliest building", including theBoston Globe and theTelegraph.[31]

In the 1960s, MayorJohn F. Collins reportedly gasped as the design was first unveiled, and someone in the room blurted out, "What the hell is that?"[32] City Hall is very unpopular with some Bostonians, as it is with some employees of the building. In 2006 some described it as a dark and unfriendly eyesore.[33] In part, such opinions are a reaction against greater Boston's numerous examples of concretemodernism from the 1960s.[citation needed]

The building's popularity declined as the tide turned away from modernism in New England to more traditional andpost-modern styles in the 1970s and 1980s. The building was no longer new, architectural monumentality fell out of favor, and the idea of a "new" era and a "new" Boston became old-fashioned. The changes in style coincided with political changes, asKevin White's mayoral administration ended.[citation needed]

Following theSeptember 11 attacks, the environment changed from what had been intended as a civil center and community space on the stairways and plaza around the building as public access was sharply reduced by the erection of security barriers and closing of numerous entrances.

Under subsequent administrations, which focused on neighborhoods rather than the center city, and decentralization instead of centralized civic power, funding was funneled away from City Hall. Compared to theBoston Public Library, some users and occupants have found City Hall to be unpleasant and dysfunctional. It has been the butt of jokes in some local magazines.[34] The structure's complex interior spaces and sometimes-confusing floor plan have not been mitigated by quality wayfinding, signage, graphics or lighting.

In 2006, a commentator wrote that, "I believe it's only a matter of time, and it will have to be totally removed, not modified, not retrofitted, not adapted."[35] In 2008, the building was voted "World's Ugliest Building" in an online poll by the travel agencyVirtualtourist.[36] A number of news outlets picked up that moniker, and MayorTom Menino adopted it during his long tenure as a boon to tourism.[37][38] A 2013 essay by columnist Paul McMorrow in theBoston Globe described it as "the worst building in the city" and advocated demolition.[30] Curbed Boston included City Hall on its 2018 list of Boston's "10 ugliest buildings."[39] A 2016 Boston Globe essay about "Boston flops, flubs, and failures" said City Hall was "cracking internally like a dead molar waiting to be pulled.[40]

Landmark designation

[edit]

TheBoston Landmarks Commission voted on December 10, 2024, to recommend landmark designation for the building.[41] City Hall formally became aBoston Landmark on January 24, 2025.[42][43][44]

Plaza

[edit]
Main article:Boston City Hall Plaza

The surrounding City Hall Plaza has experienced a similar change in assessment over time. Although its recessed fountain, trees, and umbrella-shaded tables drew crowds in its early years, the space has more recently been cited as problematic in terms of design and urban planning. To illustrate the range of opinion regarding the Plaza, in 2004 theProject for Public Spaces identified it as the worst single public plaza worldwide out of hundreds of contenders,[45] and it has placed the plaza on its "Hall of Shame."[46] On the other hand, in 2009, The Cultural Landscape Foundation included City Hall Plaza as one of 13 national "Marvels of Modernism" in its exhibition and publication.[47] Several rounds of efforts to liven up City Hall Plaza have yielded only minimal changes, with the challenge being, in part, the numerous approvals required at the city, state, and federal levels.

Proposed changes

[edit]
The building's name engraved nearGovernment Center station entrance

In 2001, some City Hall workers complained that they were suffering fromsick building syndrome.[48] However, consultants hired by the city "did not identify any building-wide or acute air-quality issues."

Since 2006, a number of proposals have been made to modify City Hall or to demolish it and replace it with a new building on another site.

On December 12, 2006, Boston MayorThomas Menino proposed selling the current city hall and adjacent plaza to private developers and moving the city government to a site inSouth Boston.[49][50] Amid his plans, in April 2007, the Boston Landmarks Commission reviewed a petition to make the building a city landmark,[51] supported by a group of architects and preservationists. On July 10, 2008, a Landmarks Commission official said that the petition to designate the building as a landmark had been accepted for study, giving the building pending landmark status. On December 10, 2024, The Landmarks Commission voted to officially designate City Hall as a protected Boston Landmark. Members of the group Citizens for City Hall also opposed Mayor Menino's plan to build a new City Hall on theSouth Boston waterfront because it would be a major inconvenience for tens of thousands of city residents.[52] In December 2008, Menino suspended his plan to move City Hall as theGreat Recession set in, stating, "I can't consciously move ahead on a major project like this at this time."[53]

An advocacy group, Friends of Boston City Hall,[54] was established to help develop support for preserving and enhancing City Hall and improving the Plaza. In 2010, theBoston Society of Architects held a competition for ideas for modifying City Hall.[55] In March 2011, plans were announced to rethink the building and its surrounding plaza.[56][57]

While a candidate for Mayor of Boston, Martin J. Walsh called for the sale of City Hall for mixed-use redevelopment.[58] But after his election, Walsh did not pursue such a sale. In 2015, the City of Boston launched a "Rethink City Hall" program to gather ideas for changes to the building and to City Hall Plaza.[59][60] The Getty Foundation awarded Boston a grant of $120,000 in 2017 to study ways to preserve and enhance City Hall and its plaza. The Foundation noted "a shift in public sentiment" in recent years, "with many residents now embracing the site as a key feature of the city fabric."[61] In 2015, the Boston Globe published a proposal by Suffolk University professor Harry Bartnick, that the building be enclosed in a variegated glass sheath, extending diagonally outward from just below the top-most line of windows into the surrounding plaza on 3 sides, and across Congress Street to the street meridian. The effect would be to re-distribute the building's visual weight, making it less top-heavy and intimidating, more welcoming, and improve its energy efficiency. On the Congress Street side, the glass sheath would provide protective covered passageways for pedestrians and traffic.[62] In August 2015, a developer's donations for a kitchen renovation was criticized by a fiscal watchdog.[63]

In January 2016, Mayor Walsh announced plans to install new LED lighting on the exterior of the building. "We are committed to creating a welcoming, lively City Hall Plaza," Walsh said.[64] The lights were turned on in October 2016.[65] A more extensive set of renovations,[66] designed by the Boston firm Utile, was completed in 2018. The renovations included new security and seating areas in the lobby, a coffee kiosk, new lighting, and new signage.[67]

In 2017, theGetty Foundation awarded the city a $120,000 grant to study the building's history and to propose a strategy for renovations. The result of the study, a 327-page Boston City Hall Conservation Management Plan, was published in 2021.[68] The study won awards from the Boston Preservation Alliance[69] and docomomo-us.[70] The renovation of the building has been cited as an example of howBrutalist buildings can be adapted to meet contemporary needs.[71]

Nearby events

[edit]

City Hall is located inGovernment Center, in Downtown Boston. The adjoining 8-acre (3.2 ha) City Hall Plaza is sometimes used for parades and rallies and, most memorably, the region's championship sports teams, theBoston Celtics,Boston Bruins,New England Patriots, and theBoston Red Sox, have been feted in front of City Hall. A huge crowd in the plaza also greetedQueen Elizabeth II during her 1976 Bicentennial visit, as she walked from the Old State House to City Hall to have lunch with the Mayor.

From 2013 to 2016, City Hall Plaza was home to theBoston Calling Music Festival.

Since November 2016, the plaza has been home to Boston Winter,[72] a holiday-themed shopping center, complete with a skating rink and other holiday events, held annually from November to January.

Gallery

[edit]
  • Brattle St., 1855 (future site of City Hall), taken by Southworth & Hawes
    Brattle St., 1855 (future site of City Hall), taken bySouthworth & Hawes
  • Overview of future site of City Hall, showing Brattle St., Cornhill, and small portion of Faneuil Hall in background, c.1920
    Overview of future site of City Hall, showing Brattle St.,Cornhill, and small portion ofFaneuil Hall in background, c.1920
  • Plaza in 1973, with distant view of Old North and I-93 (at left), and Faneuil Hall (at right)
    Plaza in 1973, with distant view ofOld North andI-93 (at left), and Faneuil Hall (at right)
  • Interior, 1981
    Interior, 1981
  • Interior, with view of Faneuil Hall through the window, 1981
    Interior, with view of Faneuil Hall through the window, 1981
  • Portrait of John F. Collins (mayor, 1960–1968)
    Portrait ofJohn F. Collins (mayor, 1960–1968)
  • Public plaza
    Public plaza

See also

[edit]

Boston municipal government history

Site history

Further reading

[edit]

References

[edit]

Notes

  1. ^Huxtable, Ada Louise (February 8, 1969)."Boston's New City Hall: A Public Building of Quality".The New York Times.ISSN 0362-4331. RetrievedJanuary 27, 2025.
  2. ^abcHevesi, Dennis (June 24, 2012)."Gerhard Kallmann, Architect, Is Dead at 97".The New York Times. RetrievedJuly 16, 2012.
  3. ^"Throwback Thursday: When Boston's City Hall Was New (and Already Unloved)".Boston Magazine. February 13, 2014. RetrievedNovember 4, 2023.
  4. ^"Kallmann McKinnel & Knowles / Campbell, Aldrich & Nulty: Boston City Hall".#SOSBRUTALISM. RetrievedAugust 27, 2016.
  5. ^http://friendsofbostoncityhall.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/A-Walking-Tour-of-City-Hall.pdfArchived June 2, 2016, at theWayback Machine Archived guided tour pamphlet for Boston City Hall, published by Boston City Council
  6. ^Survey, Historic American Buildings."Boston City Hall, One City Hall Square, Boston, Suffolk County, MA".loc.gov. RetrievedNovember 15, 2018.
  7. ^"Boston City Hall".DoCoMoMo-US.org. RetrievedApril 18, 2016.
  8. ^Rennix, Adrian; Robinson, Nathan J. (October 31, 2017)."Why You Hate Contemporary Architecture – Current Affairs".Current Affairs (July/Aug 2017). RetrievedNovember 15, 2018.
  9. ^"AIArchitect This Week | for Whom the Polls Toll". Archived fromthe original on December 17, 2013. RetrievedDecember 17, 2013. Synopsis of AIA Polls
  10. ^Neyfakh, Leon (February 12, 2012)."How Boston City Hall was born".Boston Globe. RetrievedJanuary 6, 2020.
  11. ^DeCosta-Klipa, Nick (July 25, 2018)."Why is Boston City Hall the way it is?".Boston Globe. RetrievedJanuary 6, 2020.
  12. ^"The New Boston: City Hall," Charles W. Millard,The Hudson Review Vol. 23, No. 1 (Spring, 1970), pp. 110–115
  13. ^"Boston City Hall".The Green Guide. Michelin Travel. Archived fromthe original on October 23, 2016. RetrievedOctober 22, 2016.
  14. ^Acitelli, Tom (January 7, 2019)."Boston City Hall turns 50".Curbed Boston. RetrievedJanuary 6, 2020.
  15. ^Osei, Zipporah (July 30, 2021)."Here's what the mayoral candidates think of Boston's polarizing City Hall".The Boston Globe. Boston Globe Media Partners, LLC. RetrievedAugust 27, 2021.
  16. ^"Boston City Hall".American Institute of Architects. RetrievedAugust 28, 2016.
  17. ^Huxtable, Ada Louise (September 11, 1972)."New Boston Center: Skillful Use of Urban Space".The New York Times. RetrievedOctober 22, 2016.
  18. ^Freeman, Donald (1970).Boston Architecture. The MIT Press. p. 57.ISBN 978-0262520157.
  19. ^Lyndon, Donlyn (March 18, 2007)."Why City Hall is worth saving".The Boston Globe. RetrievedOctober 22, 2016.
  20. ^Southworth, Susan; Southworth, Michael (2008).AIA Guide to Boston (3rd ed.). Globe Pequot Press. p. 52.ISBN 978-0-7627-4337-7.
  21. ^"Boston City Hall listing on Great Buildings Online". RetrievedDecember 13, 2006.
  22. ^"Boston City Hall Landmark Petition Form"(PDF).Friends of Boston City Hall. RetrievedOctober 22, 2016.
  23. ^Huxtable, Ada Louise (February 25, 2009)."The Beauty in Brutalism, Restored and Updated".The Wall Street Journal. RetrievedOctober 22, 2016.
  24. ^Wolf, Gary, "Inventing a City Hall"Historic New England, Winter/Spring 2009
  25. ^Ramos, Dante (December 13, 2015)."The Bold and the Brutal".Boston Globe. RetrievedNovember 17, 2020.
  26. ^"The 100 Best Buildings in Boston".Boston Magazine. RetrievedMay 29, 2023.
  27. ^Flint, Anthony (July 1, 2019)."Learning to love the world's ugliest building".Boston Globe. RetrievedJune 28, 2020.
  28. ^Tran, Claire (February 12, 2019)."For Boston City Hall's 50th Birthday, a Commemorative Pin".CityLab. RetrievedJune 4, 2019.
  29. ^Betsky, Aaron (January 27, 2019)."Boston City Hall is the frog waiting to wake up as a prince".dezeen. RetrievedJanuary 15, 2020.
  30. ^abMcMorrow, Paul (September 24, 2013)."Boston City Hall should be torn down".The Boston Globe. RetrievedFebruary 13, 2014.
  31. ^"Redemption: The "World's Ugliest Building" Just Won a Major Architecture Award – Architizer Journal". August 20, 2019.
  32. ^Thomas, Jack (October 13, 2004)."I wanted something that would last".Boston Globe. Archived fromthe original on October 22, 2004. RetrievedJuly 11, 2008.
  33. ^"The civic heart of the city".The Boston Globe. RetrievedNovember 15, 2018.
  34. ^Weekly DigArchived May 18, 2009, at theWayback Machine, May 2008
  35. ^Lockley, Walt."Brutalized in Boston". Archived fromthe original on June 8, 2006. RetrievedMay 9, 2020.
  36. ^Belinda Goldsmith (November 14, 2008)."Travel Picks: 10 top ugly buildings and monuments". Reuters. RetrievedAugust 15, 2012.
  37. ^Boston City Hall tops ugliest-building list.The Boston Globe
  38. ^reuters.comTravel Picks: 10 top ugly buildings and monuments
  39. ^Acitelli, Tom (December 3, 2018)."Boston's 10 ugliest buildings, mapped".Curbed Boston. RetrievedJanuary 6, 2020.
  40. ^Brodeur, Michael Andor (July 26, 2016)."Four centuries of Boston flops, flubs, and failures".Boston Globe. RetrievedJune 28, 2020.
  41. ^Christantiello, Ross (December 17, 2024)."Boston City Hall one step closer to historic landmark designation".The Boston Globe. RetrievedJanuary 25, 2025.
  42. ^Rourke, Riley (January 24, 2025)."Boston City Hall, once named 4th ugliest building in the world, is now a historic landmark".CBS Boston. RetrievedJanuary 27, 2025.
  43. ^Fonseca, Camilo (January 25, 2025)."Boston City Hall, a polarizing building to many people, achieves historical landmark status".The Boston Globe. RetrievedJanuary 27, 2025.
  44. ^"Mayor Michelle Wu Announces City Hall as the Newest Historic Landmark in Boston".Boston.gov. RetrievedJanuary 30, 2025.
  45. ^"15 Squares Most in Need of Improvement".Project for Public Spaces. RetrievedJune 1, 2016.
  46. ^"City Hall Plaza – Hall of Shame".Project for Public Spaces. Archived fromthe original on January 31, 2016. RetrievedJune 1, 2016.
  47. ^"Landslide 2008: Marvels of Modernism / The Cultural Landscape Foundation".tclf.org. RetrievedNovember 15, 2018.
  48. ^Lombardi, Kristen (April 11, 2002)."How sick is City Hall?".Boston Phoenix. Archived fromthe original on March 2, 2006. RetrievedMay 9, 2020.
  49. ^"Menino proposes selling City Hall".Boston Globe. December 12, 2006. Archived fromthe original on December 14, 2006. RetrievedDecember 12, 2006.
  50. ^Beam, Alex (December 18, 2006)."Wrecking ball tolls for City Hall".Boston Globe. RetrievedDecember 18, 2006.
  51. ^"Landmark Petition"(PDF).Friends of Boston City Hall.org. RetrievedSeptember 4, 2016.
  52. ^Drake, John C. (July 11, 2008)."Embattled City Hall defenders change strategy".The Boston Globe. RetrievedNovember 15, 2018.
  53. ^Maura Webber Sodivi (December 17, 2008)."Recession, It Seems, Can Fight City Hall; Relocation Is on Hold".The Wall Street Journal.
  54. ^"Friends of Boston City Hall". RetrievedAugust 28, 2016.
  55. ^Yang, Lin."Re-imagining Boston's City Hall Building".SHIFTBoston Blog. RetrievedSeptember 4, 2016.
  56. ^Casey Ross.A 10-year plan for City Hall Plaza: New incremental approach starts with remodeled T station, trees. Boston Globe, March 16, 2011
  57. ^What do you think should be done to City Hall Plaza? Boston Globe, March 16, 2011
  58. ^Rocheleau, Matt (September 13, 2013)."Foes critique Martin Walsh's City Hall sale plan".Boston Globe. RetrievedMay 6, 2020.
  59. ^"Rethink City Hall". City of Boston. RetrievedDecember 3, 2016.
  60. ^"Mayor Walsh Announces Launch of RethinkCityHall.org, Inviting the Public to Help Reimagine the Future of City Hall and the Plaza". City of Boston. RetrievedDecember 3, 2016.
  61. ^Acitelli, Tom (August 1, 2017)."Boston City Hall receives Getty grant for preservation work".Curbed Boston. RetrievedJanuary 6, 2020.
  62. ^Bartnick, Harry (July 25, 2015)."Give Boston's City Hall a much-needed makeover".Boston Globe. RetrievedJune 25, 2020.
  63. ^Ryan, Andrew (August 9, 2015)."Kitchen upgrade gets mayor in hot water".Boston Globe. RetrievedJune 26, 2020.
  64. ^Irons, Meghan E. (January 23, 2016)."Mayor decides it's time to brighten up dreary City Hall".Boston Globe. RetrievedMay 11, 2020.
  65. ^Acitelli, Tom (October 13, 2016)."Boston turning on new City Hall Plaza lights".Curbed Boston. RetrievedMay 11, 2020.
  66. ^"Boston City Hall Public Spaces Renovation". Utile. RetrievedJune 30, 2020.
  67. ^Cogley, Bridget (October 22, 2019)."Boston City Hall renovation preserves 'straightforward honesty' of brutalist building".Dezeen. RetrievedJune 30, 2020.
  68. ^"Boston City Hall Conservation Management Plan"(PDF).Getty Foundation. RetrievedMay 29, 2023.
  69. ^"Boston City Hall Conservation Management Plan".Boston Preservation Alliance. RetrievedMay 29, 2023.
  70. ^"Boston City Hall Conservation Management Plan".docomomo-us. RetrievedMay 29, 2023.
  71. ^"Reconsidering Brutalist Renovations: A Transformation of the Boston City Hall for the Public".ArchDaily. RetrievedApril 22, 2025.
  72. ^Tran, Claire (November 30, 2017)."Boston Winter in City Hall Plaza Is Back and Better Than Ever".Boston Magazine. RetrievedMay 5, 2018.

Bibliography

External links

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