MORE COMPLEX THAN WASTELAND REPARATIVE SITE HISTORY ALONG THE BOSTON-REVERE BORDER

In this project, I seek a way to establish a site without emptying a place. I examine the way that project proponents talk about the Suffolk Downs development, Boston’s largest-ever development project along the town border with Revere, and argue that they empty the site through the use of spatial a...

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Main Author: McCann, Tess Davenport
Other Authors: Huntley, Eric Robsky
Format: Thesis
Published: Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2022
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/138986
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author McCann, Tess Davenport
author2 Huntley, Eric Robsky
author_facet Huntley, Eric Robsky
McCann, Tess Davenport
author_sort McCann, Tess Davenport
collection MIT
description In this project, I seek a way to establish a site without emptying a place. I examine the way that project proponents talk about the Suffolk Downs development, Boston’s largest-ever development project along the town border with Revere, and argue that they empty the site through the use of spatial and temporal metaphor. The emptiness of the site allows for, even requires, large-scale interventions that “solve” the “problem” posed by emptiness. I read these interventions in the context of solutionism, a framework that inherits Enlightenment-era ideas of human dominance over the non-human world. I turn to the history of Suffolk Downs and show that there has been a cycle of emptying and improving on this land over the past 300 years of settler presence on it. Previous generations of developers have similarly emptied this place by relying on the rhetorical trope of wasteland, which allowed for human technocratic intervention in the landscape. These interventions, I argue, tended to fail, creating new wastelands that needed improvement. By telling a history of Suffolk Downs, I suggest that, despite the prevailing development rhetoric, the place’s past is not singular and the space is not simply a container for development activity. I explore “repair” as a development paradigm that resists emptying at the oil storage facility owned by Irving Oil and Global Partners, which is adjacent to Suffolk Downs. Within the logic of repair, sites can be constructed not by emptying them, but rather by embracing what’s already there and what’s been there. At the oil farm site, storage, itself a condition of emptiness, is the stuff of the site, and can be used as the basis for design interventions. More broadly, repair allows for an interdisciplinary approach to site design and discourse and has the potential to include more voices in development processes. Repair is not a silver-bullet solution to development—and that’s largely the point. Because it resists emptying, repair can be radical; and history, because it clearly states “there’s something here,” can be reparative.
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spelling mit-1721.1/1389862022-01-15T03:01:12Z MORE COMPLEX THAN WASTELAND REPARATIVE SITE HISTORY ALONG THE BOSTON-REVERE BORDER McCann, Tess Davenport Huntley, Eric Robsky Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Urban Studies and Planning In this project, I seek a way to establish a site without emptying a place. I examine the way that project proponents talk about the Suffolk Downs development, Boston’s largest-ever development project along the town border with Revere, and argue that they empty the site through the use of spatial and temporal metaphor. The emptiness of the site allows for, even requires, large-scale interventions that “solve” the “problem” posed by emptiness. I read these interventions in the context of solutionism, a framework that inherits Enlightenment-era ideas of human dominance over the non-human world. I turn to the history of Suffolk Downs and show that there has been a cycle of emptying and improving on this land over the past 300 years of settler presence on it. Previous generations of developers have similarly emptied this place by relying on the rhetorical trope of wasteland, which allowed for human technocratic intervention in the landscape. These interventions, I argue, tended to fail, creating new wastelands that needed improvement. By telling a history of Suffolk Downs, I suggest that, despite the prevailing development rhetoric, the place’s past is not singular and the space is not simply a container for development activity. I explore “repair” as a development paradigm that resists emptying at the oil storage facility owned by Irving Oil and Global Partners, which is adjacent to Suffolk Downs. Within the logic of repair, sites can be constructed not by emptying them, but rather by embracing what’s already there and what’s been there. At the oil farm site, storage, itself a condition of emptiness, is the stuff of the site, and can be used as the basis for design interventions. More broadly, repair allows for an interdisciplinary approach to site design and discourse and has the potential to include more voices in development processes. Repair is not a silver-bullet solution to development—and that’s largely the point. Because it resists emptying, repair can be radical; and history, because it clearly states “there’s something here,” can be reparative. M.C.P. 2022-01-14T14:42:49Z 2022-01-14T14:42:49Z 2021-06 2021-07-27T20:27:27.929Z Thesis https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/138986 In Copyright - Educational Use Permitted Copyright retained by author(s) https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/ application/pdf Massachusetts Institute of Technology
spellingShingle McCann, Tess Davenport
MORE COMPLEX THAN WASTELAND REPARATIVE SITE HISTORY ALONG THE BOSTON-REVERE BORDER
title MORE COMPLEX THAN WASTELAND REPARATIVE SITE HISTORY ALONG THE BOSTON-REVERE BORDER
title_full MORE COMPLEX THAN WASTELAND REPARATIVE SITE HISTORY ALONG THE BOSTON-REVERE BORDER
title_fullStr MORE COMPLEX THAN WASTELAND REPARATIVE SITE HISTORY ALONG THE BOSTON-REVERE BORDER
title_full_unstemmed MORE COMPLEX THAN WASTELAND REPARATIVE SITE HISTORY ALONG THE BOSTON-REVERE BORDER
title_short MORE COMPLEX THAN WASTELAND REPARATIVE SITE HISTORY ALONG THE BOSTON-REVERE BORDER
title_sort more complex than wasteland reparative site history along the boston revere border
url https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/138986
work_keys_str_mv AT mccanntessdavenport morecomplexthanwastelandreparativesitehistoryalongthebostonrevereborder