Seaport Square (Formerly McCourt Seaport Parcels)

^Hope there are plenty of CLEAN public rest rooms! There's no where to "go" in the entire district, short of searching up and down escalators in the hotel.
 
^Hope there are plenty of CLEAN public rest rooms! There's no where to "go" in the entire district, short of searching up and down escalators in the hotel.

Yeah, I use the bathrooms in the Seaport Hotel. They're quite nice too.
 
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http://bostonherald.com/business/real_estate/2012/12/block_block
 
Seeing that map reminded me that some of the planned footprints for Seaport Square are bigger than Fan Pier's footprints. :(
 
Whoa. Wait, what?

Big Ticket | Sold for $50,000,000
Robin Finn, NY Times

Another in the skein of palatial domiciles with Central Park vistas and/or impeccable Fifth or Park Avenue pedigrees that named their price in a resurgent 2012 luxury market and received it without the nuisance of negotiations, a full-floor co-op at 944 Fifth Avenue that sold for $50 million was the most expensive sale of the week, according to city records. And it wasn’t even a penthouse with wraparound terraces. In fact, it is not a penthouse nor does it possess any outdoor space.

Citing a confidentiality agreement, Mr. Burger declined to comment on the sale or verify the identity of the buyer. But the buyer was named in public records as Frank McCourt, provoking not-so-idle speculation that the Frank McCourt who was sufficiently flush to pay the full listing price in December is very likely the former owner of the Los Angeles Dodgers baseball franchise, which was sold to an investment group headed by Magic Johnson for a record $2.15 billion last spring after filing for bankruptcy.
 

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