The Treatment of City Squares 
THE GARE l)E I.’eST 
PARIS 
i 
THE STAZIONE OCCIDENTALE AND PIAZZA ACQUA VERDE GENOA 
well and courageously, appears, at first view 
from its land entrance, as failing utterly in its 
civic art from the mean want of boldness. 
Those who know Dewey Square, before 
the new South Terminal in Boston, will find 
there as inconsistent a failure, and one even 
sadder. An immense and imposing station 
was erected on a broad open space—broader 
38° 
