
The unfinished renovation of Copley Square Park, which has been ongoing since 2023, has already been met with mixed reviews from residents.
The project was originally slated to be completed by the end of 2024, but the city extended the deadline to April of 2025, anticipating the Boston Marathon.
The
deadline has since been extended to September, and subsequently to the
end of 2025. The current budget sits at $18.9 million, more than double
the original estimated budget of $7.5 million in 2021.
“It’s
premature to jump to definitive conclusions until we see the definitive
outcome,” said Martyn Roetter, chair of the Neighborhood Association of
the Back Bay, which was involved in the planning of the Copley Square
redesign.
“The mayor
said that this design is a result of endless numbers of community
engagements and questions and surveys, which is kind of true. However, I
can confirm that certainly NABB was opposed to this particular design.
We would’ve preferred much more of a repair and restore operation.”
The
opened section of the park currently features a wide concrete “event
space,” as described on the project webpage of Sasaki, the consulting
firm hired to complete the redesign.
“
We did not have a space for public gatherings, like a block party, or
the Boston Marathon setup, or the farmer’s market, or different
demonstrations,” said Meg Mainzer-Cohen, the president of the Back Bay
Association. Any events hosted on the grass at Copley, or along the
Commonwealth Ave. Mall, she said, caused a lot of harm to the grass and
were not sustainable.
“The
plans for Copley Square had to do with having more hardscape, so that
the city could host different events that would not do any harm to the
grass. I did have the opportunity, when the farmer’s market moved into
the new park, to really notice how well that works. I think it’s really
creating a great public space.”
But
residents are still unsure about having events be the focus of the
space. “We don’t want it to turn into a smaller version of City Hall
Plaza,” Roetter said. Sasaki, the consulting firm, also redesigned City
Hall Plaza, which completed construction in 2022.
The
city has also opened the “raised grove” section to the left of the
plaza in Copley Square, which is a slightly higher gray concrete space
that houses 10 trees and wooden benches along the sides.
The
rest of the park, which is still blocked off, will include a small lawn
in front of Trinity Church, and concrete paths cutting diagonally
across to streamline foot traffic. The original Copley Square Plaza
fountain will be preserved.
“Many
residents and visitors have expressed appreciation for how the space is
functioning,” a spokesperson for the Parks Department said in an email,
pointing specifically to the success of the farmer’s market. “At the
same time, some community members have shared that they’d like to see
more green space in the park. We hear and value that feedback, and we’re
excited that the final phase of the project, which includes an expanded
lawn area near Trinity Church and the renovation of the iconic
fountain, will directly address that need.”