For years, conversations about restoring โGift of the Wind,โ the red kinetic sculpture at Porter Square, have been hampered by budget deficits and personnel changes at the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority. But there might soon be money behind the matter. State Representative Marjorie Decker announced in early May that she had earmarked $100,000 out of the Massachusetts House budget for critical repairs to the sculpture and is working to convene a meeting between the MBTA and Cambridge city leadership to discuss next steps.
The 41-year-old sculpture is owned by the MBTA and was installed at Porter Square in 1985 when the Red Line Extension Project expanded subway access past Harvard Square. Over time, the sculptureโ s vibrant red coat faded to a grayish pink. Recently, its creator, Susumu Shingu, and Porter Square residents have renewed their requests for a paint job and for its moving parts to be inspected. At a March meeting of the Porter Square Neighborhood Association, which Decker attended, residents discussed the years-long effort to draw attention to the fading sculpture. And in an interview with Cambridge Day, the sculptor Shingu said he would offer his expertise if a restoration was launched.
โOf course we have [the] original drawings and construction materials, so we are ready to help [in] any way,โ Shingu said.
Despite the artistโs eagerness and the motivation from nearby Cambridge residents, โthere seemed to be a lack of clarityโ amongst different stakeholders about how much that project would cost and who would pay for it, said Decker.
โIt was a looped conversation,” she said. โIs it the city? The state? The MBTA?โ
Although the MBTA has restored the artwork in the past, the transit authority said it no longer had the funds to maintain it. Eventually, Decker asked herself, โWhat would it look like if I could earmark money instead of taking it out of [the MBTAโs] capital?โ

In the Massachusetts House of Representatives’ proposed 2027 budget, Decker said she originally asked for $350,000, which she says would have created a fund for future maintenance, but ultimately proposed $100,000.
If funds are included in the stateโs final budget, $100,000 is unlikely to cover the entire bill for restoration. At recent neighborhood association meetings, residents shared estimates ranging from $250,000 to $600,000, though Decker said the MBTAโs unofficial quote is on the low end of that spectrum.
The next steps, she said, are to convene a meeting between MBTA and city leadership to agree on the budget of the project, who will lead it, and what collaboration will look like. Decker hopes this meeting will happen by early summer.
A matter of pride
In the 1980s, the MBTA boasted the largest art collection by any transit authority in the nation. Artwork along the Red Line was commissioned by individual committees for each station and was funded by the U.S. Department of Transportation. When the artworks were first unveiled, the MBTAโs then-General Manager James F. OโLeary said this of the agencyโs attention to aesthetics: โThe money that was invested in those stations will return tenfold in terms of the commitment and the pride that people have in those stations.โ
That pride, palpable decades ago, has since faded.
โThe whole Porter Square station, when it opened, was really beautiful,โ said longtime Cambridge resident Chris Jorgenson. โNow, the whole thing needs maintenance, badly. The inside surface, the dome over the tracks. Itโs just distressingly dirty and ugly. Itโd be great if it looked nice again. I would feel more, โOh yeah, this is my T station!โ instead of โOh, this is my T station โฆ too bad.โโ

As a large, kinetic, outdoor sculpture, โGift of the Windโ has always been one of the MBTAโs most visible artworks. But it’s one of many pieces that have been neglected over the years. Now, there is no department or position at the MBTA solely dedicated to its art.
This presents, Decker said, โa question for every government.โ
โWhen we accept the gift of public art, we also need to maintain โฆ that art,โ she said. โthere has to be a commitment and a plan from the beginning โ who will take care of it and how itโs cared for.โ
When public projects debut, Jorgenson noted that maintenance is not often front-of-mind. As a result, repairing public infrastructure can be a thankless task. The work can present an inconvenience to residents and the end result is often invisible.
But, she said, the โGift of the Windโ has one thing going for it.
โCompared to a pipe in the ground, itโs visible.โ
This story was updated to add new photos from Porter Square’s MBTA station, and to include details on the Massachusetts state budget approval process.


