Park Facts
- The Esplanade stretches almost three miles along the Boston shore of the Charles River, from the Museum of Science to the Boston University Bridge.
- “The Esplanade” is the popular name for the parkland, first
used about 1910. It is a French word meaning "promenade along a shore".
- The park is made land, created in several stages from landfill.
- An estimated two to three million people visit the Esplanade every year.
- The Esplanade is under the control of the Department of Conservation
and Recreation (DCR), part of the state’s Executive Office of Environmental
Affairs.
- The Fourth of July fireworks display uses 10,000 pyrotechnic shells and devices weighing more than 17,500 pounds, and requires a nine-person crew.
- The Esplanade contains
- 6 miles of walkways and bike paths

- 5 miles of riverbank
- 3 granite landings
- 6 wooden docks
- 3 boathouses
- 1 performance facility (Hatch Shell)
- 2 playgrounds
- 1 wading pool
- 3 softball fields
- 1 T-ball field
- 5 youth soccer fields
- 1 tennis court
- 2 concession stands
- 10 memorials and statues
- 9 pedestrian bridges to take you over Storrow Drive and into the park
- 266 park benches
- 1900+ trees
To learn more about the Esplanade, visit our
History page.
Photo header ©2004 Lincoln Berry, (1) Russ Schleipman©2005
The Esplanade Association
10 Derne Street
Boston, MA 02114
617.227.0365