The tunnel originally served five closely spaced stations:
Boylston, Park Street,
Scollay Square,
Adams Square, and
Haymarket, with branches to the
Public Garden portal and
Pleasant Street incline south of Boylston. Park Street, Scollay Square, and Haymarket stations were altered over the next two decades as transfers were added to the
Cambridge–Dorchester subway,
East Boston Tunnel, and
Main Line Elevated (now part of the
Red,
Blue, and
Orange Lines, respectively). Boylston and Park Street were built with rectangular stone
headhouses designed by
Edmund M. Wheelwright that did not aesthetically match the Common. Scollay Square and Adams Square had similar baroque headhouses with four-sided clock towers. Unlike the interior decor, the headhouses were sharply criticized as "resembling mausoleums" and "pretentiously monumental". Later stations on the
East Boston Tunnel and
Washington Street Tunnel incorporated this criticism into their more modest headhouses. In 1963, the northern part of the tunnel was extensively altered during the construction of
Government Center and a new
Boston City Hall on what had been the neighborhood of Scollay Square. The northbound tunnel to Haymarket station was rerouted to the west (the southbound tunnel is still original). Scollay Square station was rebuilt as Government Center station, and Adams Square station was closed. Much of the old northbound tunnel was filled in to support the City Hall foundation; another section was turned into a delivery tunnel. Another section was rediscovered by a City Hall employee in 1983; a piece was renovated for use as records storage. Three sections, separated by walls, remain of the abandoned northbound tunnel. In 1971, the original Haymarket station was replaced with a new station just to the south. However, there have been proposals for the disused tunnel to become part of a new streetcar line that would partly replace access to rapid transit for southern Metro Boston neighborhoods that lost rapid transit service in 1987 with the demolition of the
Washington Street Elevated southern section of the Orange Line. This proposed new streetcar service could go as far south as the Red Line's
Mattapan station, with a northern turnaround terminus at
Government Center, according to a 2012-dated proposal. ==Portals==