By way of the Congress Street Bridge, Children's Wharf is a short walk from South Station, one of Boston's principal transportation hubs. The wharf is one of the more easily accessible locations on the Harborwalk, a newly established walking tour akin to the Freedom Trail, intended to take advantage of the change in landscape brought about by the Big Dig.[1]
The museum is housed in a former industrial building expanded and renovated by Cambridge Seven Associates to take full advantage of the dramatic waterfront site.[2]
In 2007 the museum completed a $47 million renovation and 23,000-square-foot (2,100m2) expansion. The improvements include green features such as green roofs, storm water reclamation to reduce run-off into Fort Point Channel, and building materials that are recycled, local, and low-emitting to qualify the Museum for the U.S. Green Building Council's LEED certification.[3][4]
Au Bon Pain is located on the ground floor of the museum in a space formerly occupied by McDonald's.
Abandoned in 1967 and photographed by Walker Evans in 1974, the bottle was cut into three sections and moved by barge to Boston in 1977. Reassembled on the wharf, the Depression-era structure resumed its original function as an ice cream stand and snack bar.
In 2006, the bottle was "uncapped" (its original top half was sliced off and preserved) so that its base could be moved slightly and rebuilt on a newly renovated Children's Museum Plaza. It was officially re-dedicated by Boston MayorThomas Menino on April 20, 2007, thirty years to the day after it was moved to the wharf.[5]
The Computer Museum, founded in 1979 with the help of Digital Equipment Corporation, opened to the public here in the fall of 1984. The Computer Museum shared space with the Children's Museum and featured exhibits such as a virtualfish tank, a robot theater, and a two-story tall representation of a computer through which visitors could walk.
A "floating museum" focusing on the Boston Tea Party, the Boston Tea Party Ship and Museum was moored on Congress Street in close proximity to the wharf. The vessel was a replica of the Beaver, one of the Britishships ransacked by the Sons of Liberty during events leading up to the American Revolution.[7]
Established in 1973, the site has hosted millions of visitors and was long the site of an annual Boston Tea Party historical reenactment each December 16. It has also been used a staging area for tax protests and political rallies. The museum was closed for eleven years after a fire, but reopened in June 2012.
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