Design by RWU Professor鈥檚 Architectural Firm Among Finalists for MLK Memorial in Boston
Professor Julian Bonder says 鈥淩ipple Effects鈥 design would honor the Kings while inspiring contemporary activism

BRISTOL, R.I. 颅颅鈥 RWU Professor of Architecture Julian Bonder鈥檚 architectural firm is among five finalists to design a multimillion-dollar memorial to Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and Coretta Scott King on the Boston Common.
Bonder is co-founder and partner in Wodiczko + Bonder, which had its design selected as one of the finalists from 126 design submissions. The design will now be open to public comment, along with the other designs chosen as finalists, before a winner is announced in November.
The Boston Common memorial is meant to honor both Kings鈥 time in Boston, the city where he earned his doctorate degree and where they met and fell in love. The chosen design will drastically change the makeup of the iconic park.
Bonder鈥檚 firm 颅颅鈥 which designed an award-winning Memorial to the Abolition of Slavery in Nantes, France 颅鈥 collaborated on the design with Maryann Thompson Architects and Walter Hood, creative director and founder of Hood Design Studio, in California. It honors the partnership between the extraordinary King couple and their accomplishments, while also establishing itself as a place to inspire civic activism.
"It is designed as a living memorial that must be continually reanimated and repurposed by the people who engage with it," Bonder said. 鈥淭his would be the place for continuing the struggle for civil rights.鈥
Called 鈥淭he Ripple Effects: Voice, Love, Non-Violence, Fellowship, Community, Justice, Action,鈥 the design was inspired by a famous quote from U.S. Sen. Robert F. Kennedy on the ripple effects a person can have with their ideals and beliefs. 鈥淚t comes from the notion that their words have spread around the world鈥 like ripples in water, Bonder said.
The design has embraced the historic and unique task of creating a monument to a partnership of two ex颅traordinary people, Bonder said. It features a pair of 鈥淏eacon Towers,鈥 which combine symbolism with action, and include quotes by both Kings on love and activism. Through a specially designed lighting and sound system, the towers would be responsive to current civil rights events so that it can inspire reflection and action, Bonder said. Emanating from the Beacon Towers, in the surface texture of the Memorial Ground, are ripples that evoke the 鈥渞ipple effect鈥 of the Kings moral leadership.
鈥淲e鈥檙e still listening to their speeches, listening to their words and carrying on their unfinished work,鈥 Bonder said. Their words and leadership 鈥渁re key to understanding how to move forward.鈥
Other key features include a mound on the east side of the memorial that recreates a journey 鈥渢o the mountaintop鈥 and an amphitheater area at the bottom edge of the mound to create a space of gathering and interaction. Another important part of the memorial is the 鈥淏ridge鈥 that stretches from the Robert Gould Shaw and Massachusetts 54th Regiment Memorial on Beacon Street to the Beacon Towers. A 鈥淲all of Words鈥 would stand on a portion of the Bridge, celebrating key civil rights moments.

鈥淲e want this to be a place of celebration and a place for action,鈥 Bonder said.
The plans and design renderings for 鈥淭he Ripple Effects鈥 and the other design finalists will be on display at the Boston Public Library, in Copley Square, and the Bruce C. Bolling Municipal Building, in Roxbury, until Oct. 16, when public comment for the memorials will end.
The winning design will be selected in November by city officials and members of Martin Luther King Boston, the nonprofit group leading the memorial initiative.
To see the designs 鈥 including 鈥淭he Ripple Effects鈥 鈥 and offer input, visit the MLK Boston site: .