Revitalizing Urban Main Streets: Mission Hill & Egleston Square, Boston

A photo looking down a wide sidewalk.

Bay State Road, near Kenmore Square in Boston. (Image courtesy of Keith McCluskey, © opifice.com.)

Instructor(s)

MIT Course Number

11.439

As Taught In

Spring 2003

Level

Graduate

Cite This Course

Course Description

Course Features

Course Description

Revitalizing Urban Main Streets focuses on the physical and economic renewal of urban neighborhood Main Streets by combining classroom work with an applied class project. The course content covers three broad areas:

  1. an overview of the causes for urban business district decline, the challenges faced in revitalization and the type of revitalization strategies employed;
  2. the physical and economic development planning tools used to understand and assess urban Main Streets from physical design and economic development perspectives; and
  3. the policies, interventions, and investments used to foster urban commercial revitalization.

The course has dual goals: to explore the integration of economic and physical development interventions in ways that reinforce commercial district revitalization efforts, and to apply this knowledge through the development of a formal neighborhood commercial revitalization plan for a client business district.

Other Versions

Related Content

Karl Seidman, and Susan Silberberg. 11.439 Revitalizing Urban Main Streets: Mission Hill & Egleston Square, Boston. Spring 2003. Massachusetts Institute of Technology: MIT OpenCourseWare, https://ocw.mit.edu. License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA.


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