Auntie Kay & Uncle Frank Chin Park

Auntie Kay & Uncle Frank Chin Park in Boston is the Greenway's tranquil portal into Chinatown, a pocket of serenity and symbolism where water, stone, and light weave together into poetry.

Nestled between bustling streets and framed by sculpted bamboo and cherry trees, the park glows with cultural rhythm. The centerpiece is a serpentine waterway inspired by traditional Chinese garden design, its rippling surface reflecting lanterns, calligraphy motifs, and the red steel pagoda canopy that crowns the plaza. Locals practice tai chi at sunrise, families gather in the evening light, and travelers pause to rest in the shade of gingko trees. Amid Boston's modern skyline, Chin Park feels timeless, a graceful balance of movement and meditation.

Designed by landscape architect Carol R. Johnson and dedicated in 2008, Chin Park pays homage to the heritage and resilience of Boston's Chinese-American community.

Every detail of the park carries layered meaning: the water channel symbolizes life's flow and connection, the pagoda's red steel frame represents vitality and protection, and the granite carvings are etched with Chinese characters evoking peace and prosperity. The park's design draws from Suzhou-style gardens, using asymmetry and texture to create a sense of discovery within its small footprint. At night, the waterway glows with fiber-optic lights that shimmer like falling stars, a contemporary nod to ancient lantern festivals. Beyond beauty, Chin Park serves as a civic gesture, a reclaiming of space once overshadowed by the elevated highway, now transformed into a sanctuary for reflection and community.

Start your Greenway walk here, at the southern gateway near Chinatown Gate, to feel the city's cultural heartbeat before moving north toward Dewey Square and the waterfront.

Visit in the morning to watch locals greet the day with gentle stretches, or in the evening when the pagoda's lights cast warm reflections across the water. Bring a tea or pastry from a nearby bakery and settle onto one of the stone benches, the rhythm of the fountains and the rustle of bamboo make this one of Boston's most peaceful spots. In spring, the cherry blossoms turn the park into a pink dreamscape; in fall, the gingko leaves gleam gold. Auntie Kay & Uncle Frank Chin Park isn't just a landscape, it's Boston's living poem to heritage, harmony, and renewal.

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