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How the expansion of the convention center will knit South Boston and the waterfront together
By adamg on Fri, 11/26/2010 - 11:23am
Paul McMorrow takes a look at the new D Street now that Southie no longer distrusts the convention center or the fancy-shmancy waterfront district.
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D Street
I use D Street as sort of my back door way into Southie. Never any traffic on it at all.
back door, front door, side
back door, front door, side door, if you're on D street , you're in Southie.
True
But from where I live if I want to get to Broadway for example- I always go through the Seaport area onto D street.
I find it vaguely silly to
I find it vaguely silly to call the area north of East and West 1st Street "South Boston." Even without all this redevelopment branding shit, they're just such radically different neighborhoods that it seems weird to call them the same "Neighborhood." On the north side, you have a vast and empty wasteland of parking and industrial zones with the new developments, on the south side you have a dense residential neighborhood. And from a historical perspective, the "South Boston Waterfront" was built as landfill fairly late in Boston's history, (I think in the 20th Century) whereas "real" South Boston was an actual peninsula, so it's not like it has some long history of being "South Boston."
I mean sure, renaming it from South Boston to "the waterfront" was flagrantly done for marketing reasons, but giving it a separate name seems like a generally sensible idea.
Yeah.
Technically and officially the Seaport area and South Boston are the same but when I think about South Boston the Seaport area isn't the first image that comes to mind.
The reality
The Waterfront is Southie in the same way that Dunkin' Donuts is a restaurant.
Southie no longer distrusts the convention center
There is no one Southie left to oppose anything.