By Ariana Bista and Maddie Bockus
CHINATOWN — Growing up in a neighborhood with little green space and at the intersection of two interstate highways, Ada Wu often experienced bouts of intense coughing and wheezing. Like many of her friends in Boston’s Chinatown, she suffered from childhood asthma.
At its worst, nearly every breath felt so labored that she struggled to sleep.
“I would always just have my inhaler ready,” said Wu, 21, a junior at Tufts University.
For years, Chinatown has had the worst air quality and highest levels of vehicle emissions in Massachusetts, according to a 2019 analysis by the Union of Concerned Scientists. Amid growing concern about the pollution, state and city officials have launched new initiatives, including a Chinatown air monitoring station in 2024 and a revived Community Clean Air Grant program in 2025.
Ada Wu, a student at Tufts University, grew up with asthma in Boston’s Chinatown, where Interstates 90 and 93 intersect. PHOTO/MADDIE BOCKUS
Health experts say the risks of exposure to the kind of pollution that Wu grew up with are significant — and not just related to asthma. According to Doug Brugge, director of the Community Assessment of Freeway Exposure and Health studies, exposure to ultrafine particles from traffic-related pollution can contribute to respiratory, cardiovascular, and neurological health problems.
“Everyone says ‘air pollution, asthma’… but it's only a tiny part of the story,” said Brugge. “No one says, ‘Oh, my grandmother had a heart attack — that must have been air pollution.’”
In the freeway exposure and health studies funded by the National Institutes of Health from 2008 to 2012, Brugge’s team linked roadway pollution to cardiovascular health risks in Chinatown, Somerville, and Dorchester.
Chinatown, circled in red, has among the highest levels of ultrafine particle concentrations in Boston, according to a map depicting the spatial distribution of particles at the block-group level. The black lines show the intersection of I-90 and I-93. PHOTO/Thayer et al., PLOS ONE
From 2023-2026, Chinatown's daily average fine particulate matter concentration (PM2.5) fluctuated in comparison to the EPA's annual standard of 9. Source: MassAir. Graphic created by Maddie Bockus using Flourish.
Wu attended Chinatown’s Josiah Quincy Elementary School, just across from Interstate 90. In second grade, she joined a “lunch and learn” program for students with asthma, where she and her classmates ate Goldfish crackers while learning how to address an asthma attack.
“I recognized that there may be a lot of students and children at Josiah Quincy that have asthma, and a good portion of these children do also live within Chinatown,” Wu said.
Josiah Quincy is the only school in Chinatown, and most students are Asian American. A 2003 Tufts University study found that 16% of their elementary school students had asthma, compared with 5.6% of U.S. children overall at the time, though the researchers noted the comparison was imperfect. No recent studies have been done at the school, and no studies have directly linked asthma rates to the neighborhood’s air pollution.
In fact, attributing childhood asthma in Chinatown to air pollution alone is not straightforward, cautioned Brugge. Air pollution is just one of many contributing factors.
Wu attended Josiah Quincy Elementary School, located in Chinatown across from the I-90 highway. PHOTO/ARIANA BISTA
Along the Rose Kennedy Greenway, the locked Bluebikes Wu and her friends would pedal as children are buried in a mound of snow blackened by roadway pollution. PHOTO/ARIANA BISTA
In middle school, Wu began volunteering with the Asian Community Development Corporation. Through the nonprofit’s youth program, she learned how decades of redlining—a discriminatory practice that denied mortgages and financial services to low-income communities of color—shaped Chinatown’s environment.
In the 1950s, the construction of I-90 and I-93 displaced residents, split the neighborhood, and brought large amounts of pollution from increased traffic. Children stopped playing ball in parks, Wu said, because the many fast-paced cars made it too dangerous to chase balls into the street.
Wu looks out from the Chinatown Gate overlooking Beach Street, a busy corridor of shops, restaurants, and traffic. Just beyond the gate sits Auntie Kay & Uncle Frank Chin Park, part of the Rose Kennedy Greenway, where she attended community events growing up. PHOTO/MADDIE BOCKUS
Since the highway construction, residents have raised concerns at public meetings and in the media. Some report black soot coating their windows and worry about the safety of eating vegetables grown in home gardens. Others have bought air purifiers in hopes of protecting their children.
Terrence Samuel, a Chinatown parking garage attendant, wipes the thick, black soot from car exhaust off of emergency equipment during each of his shifts.
“I’m definitely exposed, especially with my responsibilities,” Samuel said at a recent interview at the Beach Street Garage. “That’s probably a small idea of the stuff that I don’t realize I’m inhaling.”
Chinatown residents are mostly Asian, and 28% of households live below the poverty line, according to the 2025 Chinatown Heat Action Plan. The report identifies Chinatown as the city’s hottest neighborhood and one of its most densely populated, where extensive paving, limited green space, and heavy traffic intensify both extreme heat and air pollution. It calls for community-backed solutions such as cooling centers, misting tents, and more trees.
To address the heat and air pollution, community organizations and city officials supported the installation of an indoor air filtration system at Josiah Quincy Upper School in 2024 and plan to bring dozens of trees and shrubs to the all-concrete Reggie Wong Park.
Trees provide shade that can reduce surface temperatures and block wind, helping push polluted air upward and over the park, said John Durant, an environmental engineer at Tufts University who specializes in air pollution monitoring.
Trees and plants also absorb carbon dioxide and trap particulate matter in their leaves.
Reggie Wong Memorial Park, next to the I-90 and I-93 interchange, is Chinatown's only outdoor sports recreational area. As of 2026, plans are underway to transform the park into a greener, safer, and more inviting space. Proposed renovations include added trees, cool pavement coatings, improved courts, and new seating. PHOTO/ARIANA BISTA
For Chinatown residents, addressing air pollution also means responding to a legacy of displacement and building on the grassroots movements that began when the interstates were built. Residents once organized to oppose projects that would increase traffic, including the successful 1996 protest against a proposed off-ramp. Today, that work includes supporting local businesses over chain franchises, resisting development pressures, and maintaining Chinatown’s cultural identity.
Community organizations such as the Chinatown Community Land Trust and the Asian Community Development Corporation are buying back land in Chinatown and building affordable housing to help residents remain in the neighborhood. They organize many of the community gatherings and cultural celebrations Wu loved as a child, such as kung fu movie screenings at Auntie Kay & Uncle Frank Chin Park.
For Lydia Lowe, director of the Chinatown Community Land Trust, such work is essential to improving residents’ health and the neighborhood’s future.
“The central question is, ‘What makes Chinatown Chinatown, and how do we keep it?’” Lowe asked. “If you want to keep that, then there has to be a way to keep the people … and for them to thrive.”
Wu’s own family legacy is etched in vibrant swirls of gold and cyan on an alley wall in Chinatown, bringing light to a dark, narrow corner surrounded by traffic. The mural "Where We Belong" by Ponnapa Prakkamakul, a Thai contemporary visual artist and landscape architect, features Wu's family noodle recipe, traditionally served on birthdays. The artwork honors longtime residents as the neighborhood changes, reminding them they still belong.
The mural “Where We Belong” on Oxford Street features Wu’s family noodle recipe, traditionally served on birthdays. By artist Ponnapa Prakkamakul, it is part of the Asian Community Development Corporation's strategy to preserve Chinatown’s identity and combat displacement from historically unjust policymaking. PHOTO/MADDIE BOCKUS
As a child, Wu spent time at the playscape at Auntie Kay & Uncle Frank Chin Park. PHOTO/MADDIE BOCKUS
In high school, Wu became involved in the Asian Community Development Corporation’s efforts to redesign public spaces for residents of all ages to enjoy.
She served on the committee that selected the "Dancing Dragon" art installation at One Greenway Park. The small park—featuring a deck, walkways, lawn, and landscaped areas—is nestled between two residential buildings by the I-93 on-ramp. Wu said the installation, a winding pavilion with suspended swings built on the lawn in 2023, was inspired by the traditional Chinese dragon dance and designed to “represent the community.”
In 2020, at a virtual community meeting on the redevelopment of Chinatown’s Parcel R-1, Wu urged city officials to replace the existing parking lot with affordable housing, green space, or a public library. Sharing her experience with childhood asthma and how common it was among her peers, she argued that traffic from parking lots worsens the neighborhood’s pollution.
Wu plays on the "Dancing Dragon," an interactive art installation at One Greenway Park, a previously unused green space next to the highway. The swing moves on its own, like a seesaw, when riders on each side press their feet down. PHOTO/MADDIE BOCKUS
Wu has outgrown her asthma and now spends most of her time on the leafier Tufts University campus in Medford. But she returns often to visit Chinatown, where her parents and grandparents live. She still attends community events and volunteers when she can.
When she finishes at Tufts, Wu plans to continue advocating for affordable housing and environmental justice in Chinatown.
She hopes to shape the vision of new developments, including the neighborhood’s new public library branch and future art installations.
"One of my personal joys is just talking to community members and hearing what they have to say, hearing the stories, and really passing down the oral legacy,” Wu said.
Chinatown community members gather for the Asian Community Development Corporation's annual meeting, “For Our Future,” which Wu traveled from Medford to attend on a Wednesday night. PHOTO/ARIANA BISTA
Ariana Bista is a master's of public health student studying epidemiology, biostatistics, and community health at BU School of Public Health. You can reach her at bistaa@bu.edu. Maddie Bockus is a master's of journalism student at BU College of Communication and a writing & communications specialist for the BU Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine. You can reach her at mbockus@bu.edu.