For immediate release Contact: Wendy Fox
REHABILITATION
OF
SET TO
BEGIN IN EARLY 2008
The Department of
Conservation and Recreation (DCR) plans to begin rehabilitating the Plymouth
Rock Portico in early 2008 with $680,000 that the Patrick administration has
made available to preserve and protect this valuable historic structure.
Work on the
Portico, built in 1921 in honor of the 300th anniversary of the
Pilgrim’s arrival in
During the
construction, Plymouth Rock itself will be encased in a heavy-duty plywood box
for protection.
“We are very
pleased to be able to restore and rehabilitate this icon of American history,”
said DCR Commissioner Richard K. Sullivan Jr. “The significance of Plymouth
Rock and its protective Portico for the citizens of this country – and indeed
for people from around the world – cannot be overestimated.”
With nearly 1
million visitors from around the world every year,
“The
Portico over Plymouth Rock has long been in need of significant repair,” said
Senate President Therese Murray. “It is exciting to see a plan of action that
will restore the Portico to a structure that is safe and worthy of surrounding
one of the symbols of our nation.”
DCR has developed a broad approach to
improving the visitor’s experience at the park by combining enhanced
interpretive materials, landscape improvements, and infrastructure upgrades
with historic preservation. The upcoming rehabilitation will include public safety
improvements such as replacing the deteriorated stair railing on Coles Hill,
across from the Portico.
The Portico was
designed by the famous architectural firm of McKim,
Mead and White, who also designed the Boston Public Library as well as Penn
Station and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in
The
DCR expects to award a contract for the upcoming
rehabilitation project in mid-December. Construction is scheduled for March
1-May 31, during which time the Portico will be closed to the public and interpretive
displays explaining the rehabilitation work will be installed.
This year, $133,000 in work was completed
in the park in preparation for the 2008 reconstruction. That work included
testing and design, creation and installation of an interpretive kiosk,
landscape improvements, and restroom painting. Also, an additional $445,515 was spent to rehabilitate
Frazier State Pier in
“Plymouth
Rock and the Portico are symbols for the entire world of where this great
nation began,” said state Representative Vinny deMacedo. “It is important that when people come to see
these symbols of freedom and the American dream, that they be in good repair.”
Said state Representative Thomas J. Calter, “The residents of
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