CONTENTS: Welcome to the West End! | History | Neighborhoods within the West End | Prominent Streets in the West End | Transportation (1)
In terms of scenery, right by the Charles/MGH MBTA stop is a footbridge that crosses Storrow Drive over to the edge of the Charles River. There you can find benches with trees and peaceful views of the river just a stone's throw from whizzing traffic. The automobile bridge attached to it also allows foot traffic across the Charles into Cambridge. The Charles River Park apartment complex further up Storrow Drive has some winding trails and tiny gardens scattered throughout. You'll be hard pressed to avoid the many ongoing demolition/construction projects as you walk around the area, but it's interesting for that very reason. There are crazy little boarded up buildings alongside popular and thriving restaurants and businesses. These very stark juxtopositions of beauty and eyesore create a unique location that's hard to forget.
The West End is a touchy subject to those who lived there during it's 'urban renewal'. It was first left to rot in the 1950's when officials stopped collecting the garbage and modest homes were labeled slums. Then, in the name of progress, the city decided to level it. In 1959, buildings were destroyed and countless families displaced to make way for a high-rise complex of apartments (Charles River Park with the infamous sign - `If You Lived Here, You'd Be Home Now') few of them could afford. Since then, massive public works projects - the Big Dig, the Green Line tunnel trenching, and the demolition of the old Nashua Street Registry of Motor Vehicles - have nibbled away at the area's turf. This razing of the West End was made famous by Herbert Gans's book, The Urban Villagers in 1962.
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