05/18/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 05/18/2026 10:38
In recent weeks, the City of Cambridge installed a new series of Cool Spots across Porter Square - welcoming outdoor seating areas designed to bring shade, comfort, and opportunities for social connection to some of the neighborhood's hottest and most heavily traveled plazas and sidewalks. Funded through the City's Participatory Budgeting process, these six Cool Spots create a central cluster of inviting places for people to pause, gather, cool down, and enjoy the square throughout the day.
The new Cool Spots include 22 tables and 56 chairs placed in plazas and sidewalk spaces in the heart of Porter Square and south along Mass Ave in the following areas:
These locations offer comfortable places to rest while moving through Porter Square - whether you're waiting for the Red Line or the bus, meeting a friend between errands[KD1.1][AS1.2], or simply enjoying the outdoors. As temperatures rise and we experience more frequent and extreme heat waves, shaded seating helps people stay cooler and more comfortable throughout the day. Umbrellas will be added in the coming weeks to provide even more relief from the sun.
"Cool Spots are for all. They are about protecting residents, visitors, patrons, and all members of our community from the dangers of extreme heat and ensuring everyone can spend time outside during the summer months," said Cambridge Assistant City Manager for Community Development, Melissa Peters. "We are excited that - as a result of past planning efforts and ongoing study of hyper-local climates - we are able to implement a data-driven solution that also enhances our public spaces."
The Resilient Cambridge Plan, completed in 2021, identified Mass Ave as a cooling corridor. In the summer of 2025, the City's heat and humidity sensor project documented dangerous heat index readings in Porter Square and helped inform the locations of new Cool Spots.
By creating welcoming places to rest and gather, the approach to Cool Spots draws on lessons from the City's Public Space Lab, which has piloted people-focused public space experiments across Cambridge.
The Community Development Department worked with the Department of Public Works to implement the new Cool Spots, with ongoing support from the local business community and institutional partners.
To learn more about public space projects - and hear about upcoming improvements, events, and opportunities to get involved - sign up for the City's new Parks and Open Spaces newsletter.
For more information on Cool Spots, including details about funding through Cambridge Participatory Budgeting, visit cambridgema.gov/coolspots.