12/04/2025 | News release | Distributed by Public on 12/04/2025 06:35
Charlestown is one step closer to establishing its very first local Landmark District-and the community is at the center of the process.
On July 6, 2022, 26 registered voters submitted a petition to the Boston Landmarks Commission to recognize the historic planning and development of the Monument Square area, the neighborhood surrounding the Bunker Hill Monument. The Commission agreed the area merited further study and launched the Monument Square Landmark District Study Committee-composed of Charlestown residents and Boston Landmarks Commissioners.
The Study Committee is tasked with understanding and documenting the historic, architectural, and archaeological significance of the neighborhood, proposing the district's boundaries, and crafting recommendations for long-term management of the district that preserve the area's unique character while allowing thoughtful, context-sensitive growth.
McIntyre, H. Map of the City of Boston and Immediate Neighborhood: From Original Surveys. Boston: H. McIntyre, 1852; Boston: Norman B. Leventhal Map & Education Center, Boston Public LibraryDesignating a historic district is a multi-step public journey. After the petition to landmark, the neighborhood is accepted for further study by the Boston Landmarks Commission, the real work starts:
At each step, there are clear opportunities for residents to ask questions, share ideas, and shape the future of their neighborhood.
The Study Committee for the Monument Square Landmark District held its first meeting on April 1, 2025, and has been meeting regularly, both in person and virtually, to review the petition, evaluate the proposed boundary, and draft potential standards for the district.
One major topic currently under consideration is whether to expand the boundary proposed in the original petition. The existing proposal includes only the buildings directly around Monument Square, but the committee is exploring whether additional nearby streets and properties with similar histories should be included. They are also weighing the benefits of creating a "protection area," which would surround the district and provide light oversight focused on preventing demolitions, landscape or topography changes, or major height/massing increases that could compromise the core historic district.
Public participation is essential to the Study Committee's work. All materials, agendas, approved minutes, presentations, and meeting recordings are available at boston.gov/monumentsquare. Physical binders of all documents can also be reviewed at theCharlestown Branch Library.
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