Storrow Drive

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Vorlage:Infobox road

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Storrow Drive, Leverett Circle Tunnel

Storrow Drive is a major cross town expressway in Boston, Massachusetts, running south and west from Leverett Circle along the Charles River.[1] The parkway, legally known as James Jackson Storrow Memorial Drive, officially ends at its eastward junction with Route 28 and continues as Embankment Road, part of Route 28.

Boston drivers use the route for quick access to downtown locations.[1] Storrow Drive has a junction with the Harvard Bridge (Route 2A, or Mass. Ave). It passes along the northern edge of Boston University until it reaches the Boston University Bridge (Route 2) where it becomes Soldiers Field Road.

Both Storrow Drive and Soldiers Field Road are maintained by the Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation and are part of the parkway system interconnecting the Emerald Necklace in Boston and Brookline. Together with Memorial Drive and the Cambridge Parkway, Storrow Drive is also part of the Charles River Basin Historic District (listed in the National Register of Historic Places). Prior to 1989, Storrow Drive also carried the U.S. Route 1 designation. (U.S. Route 1 is now routed along Interstate 93).

The road is notorious for speeding and aggressive driving because police enforcement along the road is difficult without a breakdown lane. It's also common for the underpasses to flood during heavy rains, sometimes stalling low-riding cars.Vorlage:Fact

History

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The "Reverse the Curse" Storrow Drive road sign

James Storrow had been instrumental in earlier projects along the Charles River, in particular the Charles River Dam. Additions to the Esplanade had been made during the 1930s only by omitting an important part of the project, a proposed highway from the Longfellow Bridge to the Cottage Farm (Boston University) Bridge, which had provoked tremendous protest.[2] After Helen Storrow, the wife of the now deceased James Storrow, supported a group opposed to the highway, it was dropped;[2] part of the funding was to have come from a million-dollar gift from her.[3] Soon after Helen Storrow's death in 1944, a new proposal for the construction of the highway was pushed through the Massachusetts Legislature. In spite of still strong opposition, and through some dubious parliamentary procedures, the bill approving construction of the highway, now officially named the James J. Storrow Memorial Drive, was passed in 1949.[4] Construction took place in the years 1950-1951. As part of the attempt to preserve park land, any land used by the highway had to be replaced by reclaiming new land along the shoreline.[5]

Storrow Drive was officially opened in a ribbon cutting ceremony by Govenor Paul A. Denver on 15 June 1951.[6]

A famous Storrow Drive landmark is a sign on an overpass reading "Reverse Curve".[1] When the Boston Red Sox were in the playoffs, the sign was spraypainted to say "Reverse the Curse".[1] After the Red Sox 2004 championship, the sign was changed to read "Curse Reversed".Vorlage:Fact

Exit list

Exits on Storrow Drive are unnumbered.

Mile Destinations Notes
Road continues as Soldiers Field Road
4.1 University Road – Boston University, Brookline Eastbound exit only.
To   Route 2
5.0 Kenmore Square, The Fenway Old alignment of U.S. Route 1.
5.1   Route 2A (Massachusetts Avenue) – Cambridge Westbound exit only.
6.0   Route 28 South – Copley Square, Back Bay Official eastern terminus of Storrow Drive.
Road continues as Embankment Road / Route 28 North

References

  1. a b c d Ira Gershkoff, Richard Trachtman: The Boston Driver's Handbook: Wild in the Streets. Da Capo Press, 2004, ISBN 0-306-81326-2, S. 27–29.
  2. a b Nancy S. Seasholes: Gaining Ground: A History of Landmaking in Boston. MIT Press, 2003, ISBN 0-262-19494-5, S. 206.
  3. "Fight begins on $4,855,000 Basin Project," Boston Evening Transcript, Mar. 6, 1929
  4. "Embankment Road approved by House in stormy session," Boston Globe, Apr. 29, 1949
  5. Massachusetts General Court Acts of 1949, Chap. 262
  6. New York Times, 16. Juni 1951, abgerufen am 22. Februar 2007.


Vorlage:US-road-stub