Skip to content
io9

Should Boston Become A City Of Canals?

By

Reading time 1 minute

Comments (0)

Boston, like a number of coastal cities, is facing a tricky problem in the coming years: Sea levels are rising, and rising quickly, leaving cities more and more at risk for intense flooding. Could building a canal system help keep Boston high and dry?

A report from the Urban Land Institute takes on the question of what to do about the encroaching sea, currently pushing up on land at a rate of about 0.11/inches per year. In addition to some more conventional methods of stemming the tide, including improved seawalls and elevated construction, they have another suggestion: Turn Boston’s Back Bay into a canal system.

Noting that the Boston Harbor has risen about a foot in the last century — and could go up anywhere between one and six feet in the next one — the report suggests a system in which alternating streets are transformed into canals (“much in the way Venice and Amsterdam have for centuries”), while some streets are left preserved.

Of course, even without a deliberately-constructed canal system, Boston will still very likely have to find some way to cope with increasingly high waters, as this 500-year floodplain projection of Cambridge’s Alewife Quadrangle shows:

You can check out the whole report right here.

Explore more on these topics

Share this story

Sign up for our newsletters

Subscribe and interact with our community, get up to date with our customised Newsletters and much more.