
Learning opportunities on Central Wharf
Because the Aquarium sits right on Boston Harbor, visitors can see how higher tides affect public spaces—not just as lines on a chart, but in real time.
“People throughout the region can come and interact with a natural phenomenon,” said Luz Arregoces, director of community engagement at the Aquarium. “It’s also an educational opportunity for people to see what sea-level rise could look like and feel like in the future, because science and data show that our baseline will be at those levels in 50, 100, 150 years.”
The Aquarium is working to enhance and improve our Harborwalk to not only make it more physically resilient to flooding, but also to create educational opportunities, such as installations and programming, for visitors to learn more.
“Our hope is to seize the opportunity and really use it as a teachable moment for people,” Luz said.
Building climate resiliency
King tides are a temporary event—but they’re also a preview of the future. They highlight the urgency of developing long-term, collaborative solutions for climate resiliency.

“We can decide we as the Aquarium are going to put measures in place, but that’s only going to protect our piece of land in the short term,” Luz said. “To have protection long term as a region, we all need to be working together.”
The Aquarium is working alongside the Wharf District Council, the neighborhood association for Boston’s waterfront, on a master plan that brings together landowners from Christopher Columbus Park to Rowes Wharf. The goal: nature-based solutions that protect people, places, and ecosystems.
Examples include attenuation islands—land masses that help break up waves—and “living seawalls,” a “green the gray” solution that adds scalloped panels to traditional seawalls. This gives marine animals places to attach and helps sustain underwater ecosystems.
“We’re still protecting the shoreline, but in ways that are helping habitats underwater,” Luz said.
Green spaces like parks also play an important role. They aren’t just a great space for residents to enjoy; they absorb rain and stormwater, acting as natural sponges during extreme weather.