The new platforms at Fields Corner Station on
the Red Line.
Photo by Pete Stidman
By Pete Stidman
News Editor
Great fanfare and a soon-to-be-cut bright red
ribbon greeted commuters at the Fields Corner Red
Line Station on Tuesday morning. Many of them
sported confused looks as they mounted stairs to
and from the station's new subway platforms - part
of a $30 million station renovation - as they spied
the governor, the mayor, MBTA general manager
Daniel Grabauskas and every elected official in the
neighborhood stepping up to a podium in the
crosshairs of several TV cameras.
"I saw general manager Grabauskas and [state
transportation secretary Bernard] Cohen get off
the train this morning," state Sen. Jack Hart said
to the crowd&emdash;praising Grabauskas' hands-on
approach. "I thought it was a ceremonial first ride
at first, I did. But it wasn't. They came here on
the train from Beacon Hill."
Grabauskas himself thanked neighborhood
activists for their influence in the new station's
design, naming Tom Gannon, president of the Fields
Corner Civic Association, Sandi Bagley, co-Chair of
the Fields Corner Station' working committee and
several others.
Gov. Deval Patrick plugged the new station's
greater accessibility for people with disabilities,
state Rep. Martin Walsh called Grabauskas a
wonderful general manager "regardless of what you
read in the newspaper," and Mayor Thomas Menino
made a timely point, hailing Viet-AID's nearly
completed project across the street from the
station at 1460 Dorchester Ave.
"Transit-oriented development, it's good for our
city, it's good for our environment," Menino said.
"Let's continue to work together to make it
happen."
The comment comes just a month after another
Vietnamese-American Initiative for Development
[Viet-AID] project - Bloomfield Gardens, on
the opposite side of the station on Geneva Avenue -
was delayed when several abutters argued against
its proposed height and density at a Boston
Redevelopment Authority meeting.
When Gannon took the microphone, he highlighted
the vigilance needed by communities to push such
projects along.
"In 1992, we started working on issues here. Now
those issues are down to a minimum. We have been
following this ball for 16 years," Gannon said,
also touting the fact that the first Guinness beer
was poured at the Blarney Stone bar in 1965 - a
local claim to fame.
Rep. Walsh also sounded a historical note from
the podium, recalling when members of Dorchester's
former delegation in the State House, with names
such as Thomas Finneran, Jim Brett, Paul White and
William Bulger, first managed to get $67 million in
the budget for the renovation of all four
Dorchester stations back in 2000.
Rep. Marie St. Fleur added that a vote on the
budget item - which slowly grew through multiple
votes and MBTA appropriations to $100 million and
made Ashmont Station's reconstruction a separate
line item backed with a private developer's project
(which became the Carruth Building) - was one of
the first votes she took as a state lawmaker.
The Fields Corner renovation included a new
station lobby, new platforms that accommodate
six-car trains, new elevators and escalators, a new
lobby and new bus ways, among other
improvements.
With similar upgrades, Savin Hill station
re-opened in 2005. A Shawmut Station rehab is
largely complete, save the repair of some drainage
problems at track level. And the T hopes to
complete the Ashmont Station reconstruction next
year.
Aside from maintenance concerns and a few
details, many neighborhood leaders said they were
happy with the project's results in Fields
Corner.
"It's a world of difference from what it was
years ago," said Lee Adelson, president of the
Trinity Square Neighborhood Association, chair of
the Fields Corner Main Street board, and also a
member of the Fields Corner station's oversight
committee. "We toured all the other stations and
looked at what they had and what we didn't have. We
didn't get everything we wanted. But we got just
what we needed."
Although the working committee for the station
rehabilitation has dissolved itself, Ed Crowley, a
member of the Fields Corner Civic Association who
also works days inspecting construction sites, said
there is still reason to advocate a little before
Barletta Construction and its sub-contractors leave
the site entirely.
Asphalt in the station's new bus ways, installed
by a sub-contractor, is buckling in several
locations. The problem is likely due to an error in
how the asphalt was bonded to the concrete
underneath it, said Crowley.
In at least two spots viewed by the Reporter,
heavy bus tires have re-molded the asphalt so much
as to reveal the concrete underneath. That concrete
underneath was apparently not scarified or torn up
as city streets routinely are before they are
repaved. In other locales on the bus way, the
asphalt is being pushed up onto the sidewalk or
into storm drains. The wavy road could provide a
challenging job for snow plows this winter.
Crowley also looked to the bridge over the bus
way, as well as the span across Dorchester Avenue,
both of which fell outside of the project's
purview. Both, with their crumbling concrete and
rusty steel, provided a stark contrast to the
brilliant shine of the new glass and metal
station.
"That's a story for another day," he said.
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