How Did the North End’s Car Owners Steal a Public Playground?
Christian MilNeil | StreetsblogMASS | July 30, 2020
https://mass.streetsblog.org/2020/07/30/how-did-the-north-ends-car-owners-steal-a-public-playground/
Like many parking lots, the one on Foster Street in the North End is easy to overlook. It’s the kind of place that few people care about: a dead-end alleyway with trash collecting in its corners and about 18 cars parked haphazardly among its potholes.
But unlike most parking lots, this small plot of pavement is technically a public park.
According to the 2020 Boston Parks and Recreation Department’s directory, the 0.11 acre parcel at 15 Foster Street is officially known as “Foster Street Playground,” originally acquired as parkland in 1930.
In a March 2020 op-ed for NorthEndWaterfront.com, Peter Petrigno, an abutting property owner, recalled how car owners took advantage of the city’s neglect to take over the property:
“I played there everyday as a child. It was my backyard. As the demographics of the area changed and fewer children were playing there, the city completely abandoned the property. Cars eventually started parking there. When the city...