
Photo Credit: Jules Roscoe On several bridges above the Mass Pike, a series of locks dots the chain link fence. These locks come in all sizes. Some have rusted shackles, and others are shiny and new. Many are red. More are heart shaped. A few even bear engravings, “Love You Forever.”
Around
the world, these are known as love locks, a popular tradition in scenic
cities. Couples write their names on the lock, put it on a bridge and
throw away the key, to symbolize that their love is locked forever.
Usually,
love locks are found on bridges above rivers, both for the scenery and
so that the key is truly gone forever when it is thrown into the water.
In Boston, the locks can be found on the Mass Ave overpass by the Hynes
Convention Center T station, the Brookline Avenue overpass near Fenway
Park, and sparsely on other bridges across the Pike, like those near
Boston University.
Love
locks are part of a global tradition which seems to have started in
2006, after an Italian romance novel featured the Roman lovers writing
their names on the padlock and throwing the key into the canal.
They
became most popular, however, in Paris, on the Pont des Arts above the
Seine River. In stark contrast to the fences of the Mass Pike
overpasses, the locks on this bridge were so dense that it was
impossible to see the fence itself.
Couples from around the world would travel to the City of Love to
memorialize their bond on the bridge and throw the key into the river,
as proof their love could not be undone.
But
the symbolic locks still have real world consequences. In 2014, a
section of the fencing on the Pont des Arts collapsed under the weight
of hundreds of locks. Since then, the fences have been replaced by glass
panes, to preserve the structural integrity of the bridge.
With
similar concerns, MassDOT regularly purges love locks from the numerous
Mass Pike overpasses that house them. The department said it was aware
of the locks and periodically removes them when their weight becomes a
hazard to the fence.
It
did not specify how it determines when the locks are hazardous but has
likely not purged the Mass Ave overpass in at least two years. One red
heart shaped lock on the fence reads in white letters, “Lisa & Josh,
Locked in Love Forever, 2023.”
After
every purge, the locks slowly trickle back. Some are simple hardware
store padlocks, with lovers’ names scrawled in permanent marker. Others
are golden heart shaped locks, sold in pairs because they are meant to
be intertwined. If you look closely the next time you cross the
overpass, you will see just how varied and beautiful these symbols of
love can be.