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Restoring the Vision
Preserving the Legacy
The Emerald Necklace Conservancy and the Emerald Necklace
Somewhere between miles 1 and 13 try to forget the
aching in your feet and the stiffness in your side and
take a moment to look around and enjoy the landscape
before you -- the spectacular hills, meadows and waterways
of the Emerald Necklace.
What BAA Half Marathon runners are fortunate to experience
is what Frederick Law Olmsted intended when he created
this unique linear park system - a place where the
parkway would create a sure route from the heart of
the city a distance of six miles into its suburbs
and where the beauty of landscape would transform the
spirit.
The Emerald
Necklace Conservancy is working to permanently re-establish
Olmsteds vision of a pleasure route with distinctive
landscapes, waterways, bridges and other structures.
The Conservancy is also working to provide safe connections
for runners, bicyclists and pedestrians to and through
the parks, and to reinforce the Emerald Necklace as
a continuous green/open space system. Its work program
also focuses on parks restoration and maintenance, public
education and outreach, volunteer parks improvement
programs, review of projects proposed in and around
the parks, and other activities. The Conservancys
programs and funding support and complement initiatives
by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, City of Boston
and Town of Brookline who began the Emerald Necklaces
restoration in the 1980s.
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