We used to go there after the Throwdown every year.
It was the perfect pre-game spot for Fenway. never crowded and pretty cheap beer/drinks (especially for the area).
We used to go there after the Throwdown every year.
It was the perfect pre-game spot for Fenway. never crowded and pretty cheap beer/drinks (especially for the area).
I'm sorry.We used to go there after the Throwdown every year.
Yeah it sucked when we found out that they split. Especially my girl. Before we met, that was a tradition of hers and her brother’s.I'm sorry.
Isn't the Buckminster already being reno'd? Is there no clarity on what's happening there or are they just gutting it?
Also, hows the Fenway Center connection going to work? Out the back?
View attachment 33456
There's already a couple of buildings with bricked up windows at 683, 721, and 731. Are those GL maintenance? Definitely gives a creepy feel to that part of the block.
My friends and I spent a lot of time around Kenmore and Fenway in high school and on vacations in college. This was a spot that we liked because it was low key, and I recall they had some long running special for large glasses of Killians Irish Red, a beer I haven’t seen or thought about in years.When I first came to Boston in '88, that Uno's was always packed, often hour plus waits for a table. That changed at some point, and the last few times I was there, my group would be one of the few parties in the dining areas. Whatever once made it a sought after spot is long gone, and it made sense to close, with or without any project happening to the building itself.
I believe that the ongoing renovation stopped when IQHQ bought the building. The Fenway Center connection would presumably be through the back, yes.
We are committed to reactivating The Buckminster, which was closed for years prior to our purchase, by preserving key elements in a fashion that recognizes its importance at Kenmore Square,” an IQHQ representative told the Globe.
Last October, after meeting with IQHQ representatives on the project, the nonprofit Boston Preservation Alliance filed a landmark petition to the Boston Landmarks Commission, which formally kicked off the city’s extensive landmarking process.
“Hotel Buckminster represents the development of Kenmore Square at the turn of the 20th century, and today remains the oldest historic building at the western edge of the square,” the landmark petition reads.
I actually met someone that lived there up till it closed and they said it was really nasty inside.
My mother in law stayed at the Hotel Buckminster a few years back. The interior was your classic "old dowager" situation: Grand, timeworn but by no means dilapidated.
Basically, a place that if you invested any modest amount into it and used a few now-standard design tricks, you'd immediately have New York magazine and Architectural Digest heralding the "chic restored magnificence" of the place, and could easily be a trendy hotspot, like the Ace, Beekman, NoMad, etc etc. in New York.
Instead they’re trying to put fucking labs right in Kenmore Square. Disgraceful.
Is the disgraceful part that it's immediately touching the square? Because IQHQ is building a 300' lab building next door that will share a party wall, and I think that idea is pretty popular...
Is the disgraceful part that it's immediately touching the square? Because IQHQ is building a 300' lab building next door that will share a party wall, and I think that idea is pretty popular...
Good question to raise. I share the angst about lab encroachment on the public realm and on preserving the city's historic character. But broadbrush anti-lab sentiment in Boston makes no sense. Usage needs for physical space are not going to stay stagnant over centuries. As we've discussed in detail elsewhere on this forum, there are a few (scarce) examples of very well integrated urban labs with excellent respect for public realm that prove it is possible; there are also many instances of failure in that regard. The interesting debate here is on how to achieve tasteful integration and preserving what matters; not on banning labs from urban spaces. Boston is emerging from the pandemic better than most cities in large part due to its robust higher ed (which includes research labs and connections to industry), medical/health sciences, and life sciences/biotech realms. Killing that golden goose makes no sense. Yet I also say this willing to fight for great public realm, streetwall activation, and historic preservation. I also would have loved to see this stay as a (restored) hotel if possible. But my main attention is to the public experience, not specifically to what goes on behind walls in non-public-facing spaces. Let's not make this into a false binary, folks.
It’s disgraceful that Kenmore has literally had life sucked out of it on every side. And yes, you don’t put a laboratory in a major urban node..
Excuse me, I did not make this binary at all. I said it’s disgraceful that the last remaining historical building defining the border to Kenmore Sq itself is being proposed to become lab space.
Also, pharma, big banks and politicians are very fond of trumpeting the benefits of the robust life sciences economy. The reality is that for Boston this has been a double edged sword. Aside from potential disrupting the urban fabric and experience, I would say that unless the city can figure out how to not let this process be a major contributor to turning Boston into SF, with unaffordable rents driven by big money from biotech, this is not the good thing we always hear it is. The question isn’t Boston’s dollar numbers on the spreadsheet, but who those dollars go to that matters.
It’s disgraceful that Kenmore has literally had life sucked out of it on every side. And yes, you don’t put a laboratory in a major urban node. The corridor between Kenmore and Audobon Circle could, with enough effort, be activated into residences and commercial space connecting these two nodes, but I’m less bothered by labs there since it’s already a totally dead space.