Construction The Lechmere Viaduct and
Causeway Street elevated opened in June 1912, providing a
grade-separated route for streetcars from
Somerville,
Cambridge, and
Charlestown to reach the
Tremont Street subway. The elevated route was intended to reduce travel time from
Lechmere Square to the subway; the only intermediate station was . This substantially reduced transit service to the north part of the densely populated West End. (Some surface streetcar lines continued to run across the Charles River Dam Bridge until the 1920s, and bus routes ran on Charles Street from 1925 to 1927 and 1935 to the early 1940s.) An
infill station on the Causeway Street elevated near Barton Street in the West End was proposed by the
Boston Transit Commission in 1917 but never built. The Museum of Science opened its Science Park museum campus on the Dam Bridge in 1951. The museum and its director
Bradford Washburn began lobbying the state legislature in 1953 to approve a new station at Leverett Circle to serve the museum. The Metropolitan Transit Authority (MTA) opposed construction of the station, arguing that fare revenue would not cover the $150,000 to $250,000 cost (equivalent to $ to million in ) of constructing the station. A bill authorizing and directing the MTA to construct the station was signed by then-governor
Christian Herter on April 29, 1954. The bill set the name of the station as Science Park. The MTA board approved the station on May 14, 1954, with an estimated cost of $225,000 (equivalent to $ million in ). Aside from the museum, the station was intended to improve access to
Massachusetts General Hospital for those taking buses to or
Boston and Maine Railroad trains to North Station, who previously had to walk from North Station or backtrack to
Charles station via . It was also to serve a
Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicles office,
Massachusetts Eye and Ear, and the West End neighborhood – the latter about to be cleared for a
controversial urban renewal project. The board approved a construction contract on November 3, 1954, with work beginning soon after. The
Metropolitan District Commission constructed a footbridge across Storrow Drive (opened in 1951) in 1955 at a cost of $120,000 (equivalent to $ million in ). It connected directly to the above-ground fare mezzanine of the station. The steel frame of the station was in place by April 1955. Science Park station opened on August 20, 1955. Despite claims from the museum and other supporters that the station would serve half a million annual riders, the MTA commented in its year-end report that "Patronage of this station has been, and continues to be, negligible."
MBTA era The
Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) replaced the MTA in 1964. The footbridge over Leverett Circle was removed in 2005 as part of
Big Dig construction (to allow for the addition on an underpass to Storrow Drive), though the state promised to replace it. In 2016, the
Massachusetts Department of Transportation began designing a replacement bridge. On January 21, 2009, station signage was changed to read "Science Park/West End", though MBTA maps continued to use the shorter name. In 2006, the MBTA began planning a renovation of the station for accessibility. Design work was completed, and an environmental assessment published, in June 2009. Initial plans for the $22 million project called for the station to remain open during most of the construction period, with the two platforms closed for sequential six-month periods. This was changed to a single six-month closure of Science Park and Lechmere stations – with no trains operating over the viaduct – to reduce the construction duration by six months and reduce costs. While both stations were closed, the MBTA operated a free shuttle bus service connecting them to North Station. Science Park station was reopened and regular service between Lechmere and North Station resumed on November 5, 2011. Only the
E branch served Science Park from when service resumed after the 2004–05 closure until 2022. E branch service north of North Station to Lechmere resumed on March 21, 2022, accompanied by an extension to . The Green Line was closed between Union Square and Government Center from August 22 to September 18, 2022; the closure allowed for final integration of a second northern branch, elimination of a speed restriction on the Lechmere Viaduct, demolition of the
Government Center Garage, and other work. Since September 2022, both D and E branch trains have served Science Park. ==Notes==