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Memory Party this Saturday, Jan. 31; Dessert Café Monday, Feb. 2. Join Us!

29 Jan

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Please join us at Cambridge Arts, at the City Hall Annex at 344 Broadway, this Saturday from noon to 3pm, to share memories of Magazine Beach Park. Do you swim there? Picnic there? Celebrate important days and events? Please share your significant recollections of this special place. We’ll share them with the park designers as they begin to map out changes to the upriver (playing fields to the Riverside Boat Club) part of the park this year. A complimentary lunch will be served.

And then on Monday evening, Feb. 2, 6-8pm, we’ll host our Dessert Café, with delicious homemade goodies and hot drinks. Several organizations will co-host the Dessert Café. They include: the Cambridgeport Neighborhood Association, Cambridge Arts, Cambridge Historical Society, Cambridge Historical Commission, Riverside Boat Club and Charles River Conservancy.

Both events are free and open to the public. They celebrate our exhibition, Magazine Beach—A Place Apart, up until Feb. 27. A note about transportation: Please walk or take public transportation to the City Hall Annex. Due to all the snow, parking will be difficult!

CCTV Show Features Volunteer Contributions at Magazine Beach

To watch Bob Hurlbut, Brian Conway and Cathie Zusy talk about our efforts, and exhibition at Cambridge Arts, go to: http://youtu.be/9RcDD76Ae7U. Thanks to Bob, for inviting us to join him and to Michael Schaffer, for creating this link for us!IMG_7428

3rd Graders from the King School Tour Exhibit

Today two third grade classes from the King School visiting Magazine Beach–A Place Apart. The students have been learning about Martin Luther King, the American Revolution and Cambridge history. The focus of our tour was “How do you make a change in your community?” Many of the students knew the park and had swum in the pool there or played soccer or T-ball.

Olympics Triathlon at Magazine Beach in 2024?

22 Jan

Yesterday, the Boston Olympics 2024 Committee presented their proposal for Boston.  They’re putting the Triathlon on the playing fields at Magazine Beach! For more information about the 2024 proposal, go to: 2024Boston.org. Never fear, they will undo what ever they do, and perhaps even make it better. Perhaps they’ll ensure that we’ll have a more swimmable Charles sooner rather than later? This would be good for everyone, fish included! The Boston Olympics Committee will be presenting in Cambridge in the coming months, so you’ll have an opportunity to learn more and ask questions. (They made their plans public yesterday.)

Screen Shot 2015-01-22 at 8.40.40 AM

Boston Olympic 2024 Proposal  for Magazine Beach--Triathlon Location

Boston Olympic 2024 Proposal for Magazine Beach–Triathlon Location

Come Share Memories of the Park, Saturday, Jan. 31, at Cambridge Arts!

15 Jan

“We used to take the Granite Street bus from Central Square to the Magazine pool.” ”We went to Magazine Beach if my father took me.” “The boat pulled up to the Magazine Beach pier. We jumped into the river to cool off.”IMG_3792

Did you ever swim in the pool or the river at Magazine Beach? Boat off the pier? Picnic under the trees? Get cotton candy from the snackbar there? Or just hang out on the terrace on late hot summer nights?

Young and old, we’re eager for your stories of the Maga and the Riv. Please share them over a complimentary lunch with us at a Memory Party on Saturday, Jan. 31, from 12-3pm at 344 Broadway.

We hope to gather stories of the park and then use them to inform landscape designers who will be working to update the western part of the park in 2015! The Memory Party will be at the Magazine Beach exhibit at Cambridge Arts on the 2nd floor of the City Hall Annex at 344 Broadway. The Cambridgeport Neighborhood Association, Cambridge Arts Council, the Cambridge Historical Commission, and storytellers at massmouth are all working together on this and the stories you share will ultimately be archived at the CHC.

If you have photographs of family and friends at the park, please bring them. We’d love to see them. We’re looking forward to hearing how this riverside park has been part of your life. Let us know if you need a ride to the event. Also, if you can’t come but have stories, please send them to me at 202 Hamilton St., Cambridge, MA 02139.

See you Saturday, January 31st! The inspiration for all of this is our exhibit, Magazine Beach—A Place Apart, which we can’t wait to share with you! Questions? Contact me, Cathie Zusy at 617-868-0489 or cathzusy@gmail.com.

2014 Accomplishments & 2015 Winter Programs

31 Dec
Magazine Beach in January 2014!

Magazine Beach in January 2014!

What a year at the Park!

  • The 1818 Powder Magazine got a new roof! (August)
  • We hosted a summer of yoga, concerts, dance, children’s activities and Bread & Puppet that over 1,300 people enjoyed! (June-August.)
  • DCR and the City of Cambridge funded landscape plans for the western part of the park (Phase 2, August & September).
  • Common Boston brought Common Build, a design/build competition to Magazine Beach (October).
  • DCR held a public meeting about bringing a “spray deck”/water feature for children to the park (October).
  • Our exhibit, Magazine Beach—A Place Apart, opened at Cambridge Arts, at 344 Broadway (November 2014-February 2015). See review in Art Fuse.

And coming soon, at the exhibition at Cambridge Arts!

  • Memory Party: Saturday, Jan. 31,12-3pm. Do you have a memory of swimming or picnicking or just hanging out in the park? Share it over lunch with us. These recollections will add to the story of the park and we’ll share them with the landscape designers—working to update the western part of the park in 2015!
  • Dessert Café: Monday, Feb. 2, 6-8pm. With remarks by Charles Sullivan of the Cambridge Historical Commission, Renata von Tscharner of the Charles River Conservancy, and Tom Reece of the DCR. Co-hosted by Cambridge Arts, the Cambridgeport Neighborhood Assn., Cambridge Historical Society, Cambridge Historical Commission, Charles River Conservancy, and the Riverside Boat Club.
  • Community Potluck: Monday, Feb. 23, 6-8pm, with bluegrass by Best Ever Chicken All are welcome. Bring a dish to share. Co-hosted by the Cambridgeport and Riverside Neighborhood Associations.

All events are free, open to the public, and at the City Hall Annex at 344 Broadway. Gallery 344 is open Monday, 8:30am-8pm; Tuesday-Thursday, 8:30am-5pm; and Friday, 8:30-12noon.

For an overview of our accomplishments in 2014, see this CCTV program with Renata von Tscharner.  Have patience: only the first 5 minutes are garbled!

Because of all of our efforts, Magazine Beach is looking better. Thank you for your financial support and for sharing your time and talents to move this project forward. To make a tax-deductible donation, see our home page!

So Grateful, Cathie Zusy for the Magazine Beach Committee, CNA



Fall Cleanup!

22 Nov

Many thanks to the 45 or so volunteers who helped out at the park this morning–despite the cold! We raked and stuffed about 86 bags of leaves and gathered many bags of trash and sticks, too. Kudos to the pharmacists-in-training at Northeastern, to the Brownies from Waltham, to Build On from CASH School in Dorchester, and to the neighbors who came out and pitched in! Many thanks also to Sasha Valleries, the Charles River Conservancy’s new Volunteer and Outreach Coordinator, for organizing this event, to Evan for helping her, and to DCR for carting all the stuff away. The park is looking good!

Opening Reception of Magazine Beach–A Place Apart

18 Nov

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Despite the cold and wet, we had a wonderful turnout last night at the opening of Magazine Beach—A Place Apart. Thanks to those who weathered the weather. And the rest of you, we hope you’ll stop by and see the show.

Exhibition Dates: November 3, 2014 – February 27, 2015

Location: at Cambridge Arts, Gallery 344, City Hall Annex, 344 Broadway, 2nd Floor

Hours: Monday, 8:30am-8pm; Tuesday-Thursday, 8:30am-5pm; Friday, 8:30-12noon

Many thanks to:

  • Cambridge Arts for inviting us to work with them on an exhibition about Magazine Beach;
  • Brian Conway for his exquisite design;
  • Marilyn Wellons for her research, writing and assistance in so many ways;
  • Lillian Hsu and Diana Lempel (CAC) for their helping to shape the show, making it much more interesting;
  • Diana Lempel for her text, interactive idea, and clarifying questions;
  • Jeremy Gaucher for helping to mount the show;
  • Fred Woods for his film;
  • David Craft for the plant specimens from Magazine Beach;
  • Tom Scanlon for his commitment to bringing nature into the exhibition;
  • All the object loaners and image and information providers;
  • The Cambridge Historical Commission for sharing their rich, rich files and knowledgeable staff;
  • Janet Theurer for her beautiful bouquets of Magazine Beach plants; and to
  • the Magazine Beach Committee of the CNA for their tireless efforts to revitalize the park.

The Magazine Beach Committee includes: Marge Amster, Brian Conway, Olivia Fiske, Richard Garver, Decia Goodwin, Max Moore and Cathie Zusy. Other board members of the Cambridgeport Neighborhood Association are also key players: Bill August, Jay Shetterly, Colleen Clark and Leslie Greis. And hundreds of others have assisted at the park. Thanks to all of you and to DCR, the guardians of Magazine Beach!

Working together, we’re making make the park nicer for everyone.

Magazine Beach–A Place Apart, Opens Monday at Cambridge Arts

31 Oct
The 1818 powder magazine with its new roof commanding attention at Magazine Beach, 2014. Photograph by and courtesy of Richard Hackel.

The 1818 powder magazine with its new roof commanding attention at Magazine Beach, 2014. Photograph by and courtesy of Richard Hackel.

Exhibition Dates: November 3, 2014 – February 27, 2015

Opening Reception: Monday, November 17, 2014, from 6-8pm

In 2015, landscape designs for Magazine Beach – Cambridge’s 2nd largest park – will be updated and its future cast. Magazine Beach – A Place Apart looks closely at the history of these 15 acres along the Charles River from a wooded island on a tidal estuary to its current form. It examines the forces that have defined it uses – for gunpowder storage, a river bathing beach, a boathouse for rowers, a storm water sewage treatment plant, and as a favorite swimming, picnicking and recreation destination.

Magazine Beach–A Place Apart was developed by the Cambridgeport Neighborhood Association (CNA) in collaboration with the Cambridge Arts Council, drawing on the resources of the Cambridge Historical Commission.

The Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation (DCR) owns and manages the Magazine Beach Park for the public.   In 2015, DCR will reopen the public process to update existing landscape plans for the park’s western portion—from the old powder magazine to the Riverside Boat Club. This follows renovation of the eastern portion in 2009. Since 2010, the CNA has worked with Cambridge and the DCR to improve the park—and at last, it’s happening. This past summer, DCR rebuilt the slate roof of the 1818 powder magazine, the park’s focal point. In September DCR committed funds, with a Cambridge match, to complete park plans.

Magazine Beach – A Place Apart offers a meditation on the past, present, and future of this dynamically changing place. We invite you to contribute to the conversation. What does Magazine Beach mean to you and what do you hope for its future?

Gallery 344 is located at the City Hall Annex, 344 Broadway, 2nd Floor, Cambridge, MA. It is free and open to the public on Monday, 8:30am-8pm; Tuesday-Thursday, 8:30am-5pm; Friday, 8:30-12noon. Questions? Contact Cathie Zusy, Chair, Magazine Beach Committee, Cambridgeport Neighborhood Association, Inc. at 617-868-0489 or cathzusy@gmail.com.

DCR Proposes a Spray Deck for Magazine Beach

28 Oct
The sort of water feature that DCR is proposing to install at Magazine Beach

The sort of water feature that DCR is proposing to install at Magazine Beach

Excellent meeting last night about DCR’s proposed spray deck for Magazine Beach.

Major points:

  1. DCR is eager to install a spray deck with ground-level features—just spray heads, no big plastic mushrooms!—at Magazine Beach in 2015. Thank you, DCR! (Note: The #1 priority for park improvements for park users is a water feature for children.)
  2. But we’ve got to determine the best location for it. There was a lot of discussion about where the best location might be.

WADING POOL LOCATION: DCR proposed putting it where the wading pool is now, but there was a lot of community pushback because it is surrounded by trees and very shady. The wading pool was always cold and dirty (with leaves)—not a place kids wanted to be. See below.

IMG_0562TOWARDS THE FIELDS: Cambridgeport neighbor and architect Max Moore suggested putting it next to the playing fields as a bridge between the playing fields and the old growth grove of trees where people picnic. Remember: where there is a water feature, there will also, one day be more of a play area for kids. Max proposes that that would be on the mound beside the playing fields.

ON THE SWIMMING POOL DECK—NIXED. While this would make sense, clustering water features, pool regulations would require that it only be accessible by the main entrance of the pool during pool hours. Not a good solution because on hot summer days the pool is often at capacity and there are long lines to get in. If we add the spray deck to the pool deck, even fewer people will have access.

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JUST TO THE EAST OF THE POOL: DCR will explore this option. Concerns: People often picnic there and it might be too shady.

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  1. DCR will explore the cost and feasibility of installing the water feature at the wading pool site, closer to the fields and beside the pool. They will report back at a public meeting in December or January when we return to thinking about the overall site plan (updating Phase II landscape plans). Clearly, we need to have a vision for the whole park before DCR invests $300k+ into the spray pool. We need to determine its proper place before proceeding with construction.

DCR’s Deputy Chief Engineer Raul Silva said that this delay would postpone the completion of the project until the fall of 2015, but that we’d be more likely to end up with something that everyone’s happy about. And that is the idea.

Many thanks to DCR for its commitment to making improvements at Magazine Beach and to the community stakeholders that attended last night and shared their good ideas.

To see the PowerPoint proposal that DCR presented last night, see:

http://http://www.mass.gov/eea/docs/dcr/news/public-meetings/materials/parklands/2014-10-27-magazine-presentation.pdf

2014 Head of the Charles–the Magazine Beach Perspective

21 Oct

Lots of wins from Riverside Boat Club this past weekend:

Gold

Men’s Grandmaster 4+ – Reeves Nelson, John Saxelby, Andy O’Brien, John Yasaitis, Ernest Cook

This crew carved 20 seconds off the record for this event.

Men’s Senior Master Single – Jim McGaffigan

Men’s Master Single – Mike Farry

Men’s Youth 2x – Jordi Cabanas, Aviv Preminger

Silver

Women’s Master Single – Alex Bailey

Bronze

Women’s Club 8+ – Eliza van Lennep, Beatrice Sims, Juliet Hollingsworth, Andrea Pauli, Lisa Russell, Senta Knuth, Justine Seraganian, Angelique Hrycko, Emma Kaufman

Women’s Master Single – Liane Keister

Women’s Lightweight Single – Lauren Ayers

Way to go, Riverside! Thanks to Dick Garver and Amanda Milad for the updates. To relive the event from Magazine Beach, watch this video by Werner Grundl of Videosphere. It really captures the excitement of the event and the athletic prowess of the competitors–many from our own Riverside.

Art at Magazine Beach–this week. Check it out!

5 Oct

Today, artists and designers participating in the 2014 CommonBoston/CommonBuild, debuted artwork they designed and built in 72 hours at Magazine Beach Park. The installations reflect this year’s theme: The Places Inbetween and the rich history of the site.

Vote for your favorite artwork by Thursday at 9pm at: http://courbanize.com/common-build-2014/. Be sure to stop by the park to see the artwork firsthand. This is the first event of Common Boston’s Fallfest, Oct. 9-12.

Many thanks to CommonBoston/CommonBuild for bringing this event to our neighborhood, to the artists who participated, and to DCR, the Cambridge Arts Council, the CNA, the BSA and others, for helping to make this happen!

For a video about this competition, watch this video featuring the Charles River Conservancy’s Renata von Tscharner and Cambridgeport neighbor, public artist Ross Miller.