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Link to original content: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boston_Marine_Industrial_Park
Raymond L. Flynn Marine Park - Wikipedia Jump to content

Raymond L. Flynn Marine Park

Coordinates: 42°20′39″N 71°02′16″W / 42.34420°N 71.03791°W / 42.34420; -71.03791
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Map of the Boston Marine Industrial Park

Raymond L. Flynn Marine Park, formerly known as the Boston Marine Industrial Park, is an industrial park which has been created on the Commonwealth Flats in South Boston, Massachusetts, United States. Before its creation, the site was used as the location for the South Boston Naval Annex, the South Boston Army Base, and was used as a general seaport district for many years. Currently, the park is in the process of being redeveloped, and utilizes many of the former military buildings. The Black Falcon Cruise Terminal is located on the site of the former Army base.

The Coastal Cement facility in the Boston marine industrial park

Also located on the site is the extensive Coastal Cement Corporation facility, designed by HMFH Architects. Completed in 1989, the facility spans 14,000 square feet with four silos that reach 120 feet and collectively store 41,000 tons of cement.[1][2] The project drew considerable attention for its unconventional architecture, which resulted in several awards including the 1990 New England Regional Council/AIA Honor Award for New Commercial Construction,[3][4] the Washington Waterfront Center's national Excellence on the Waterfront Award,[5] as well as the Excellence in Concrete Building Design Award from the Portland Cement Association & the Association of General Contractors.[3]

A structure on the north side of Black Falcon Avenue, originally constructed in 1918 as an Army warehouse, is now the Innovation and Design Building, which houses the Boston Design Center.[6]

In February 2016, the park was renamed in honor of former Boston mayor Raymond Flynn.[7]

In June 2017 at least one member of the Massachusetts Legislature (Representative Nick Collins, Democrat from South Boston) expressed a hope that a public/private partnership would enable passenger rail service to be extended along Track 61 out as far as the site.[8]

References

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  1. ^ Staff (1989). "Coastal Cement Corporation Terminal". Architectural Record. 177. McGraw-Hill: 32, 53.
  2. ^ Campbell, Robert (7 February 1989). "Industrial, but dramatic". The Boston Globe. pp. 25, 27.
  3. ^ a b Furst, Arthur (1994). The American Architectural Photographer: Profiles of the Top Talent in Architectural Photography. Rockport Publishers. ISBN 9781564960733.
  4. ^ Staff (1992). "Boston Society of Architects Awards". Architecture: The AIA Journal. 81. American Institute of Architects: 38.
  5. ^ Staff (15 October 1988). "Realty notes: Waterfront Award". The Boston Globe. p. 39.
  6. ^ Kashdan, Rachel (May 20, 2019). "10 Things you Didn't Know About the Century-Old Innovation and Design Building". Commonwealth Magazine.
  7. ^ "Raymond L. Flynn Marine Park". bostonplans.org. Retrieved February 11, 2018.
  8. ^ Chesto, Jon (June 11, 2017). "Could old track, revived to test Red Line cars, be part of Seaport's transit future, too?". Boston Globe. Retrieved June 13, 2017.
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42°20′39″N 71°02′16″W / 42.34420°N 71.03791°W / 42.34420; -71.03791