Really? Did they elaborate on why it would cost so much?
"Preservation issues" according to this Herald article which is where I saw the build out for this cost "over a million bucks"
http://bostonherald.com/business/general/view/20220923royal_sandwiches_will_gethub_treatment
Royal’ sandwiches will get Boston treatment
By Donna Goodison
Sunday, September 23, 2012 - Updated 4 weeks ago
Boston will get a noble take on sandwiches when a new restaurant opens next month in an improbable location: a former Boston Common restroom facility known as the Pink Palace.
The British-inspired Earl of Sandwich chain has converted the octagon-shaped building into a take-out restaurant with outdoor seating and a menu that includes its signature hot sandwiches and wraps, salads, soups and other items.
Robert Earl, chairman of the 8-year-old Orlando-based company and the founder and CEO of Planet Hollywood International, sees the location as a catalyst for expansion in Boston.
“The brand exposure from being on Boston Common is phenomenal,” said Earl, who has been looking at other potential Hub locations this weekend. “There can easily be four or five.”
Earl also hopes to land some Mass Pike locations for Earl of Sandwich, whose first Boston eatery, a franchise unit at Logan International Airport, opened in 2009.
The company had hoped to have the Boston Common restaurant ready for customers by the end of August, but preservation issues put the project behind schedule.
“The building has been disused for so long, that the more work you did on it, the more problems you found, but we’ve dealt with every single one of them,” Earl said. “We’ve spent a little bit extra money, but the place has come out beautifully.”
And Earl expects the over-budget job for the approximately 600-square-foot structure, vacant since the 1970s, will convince anyone wary of a restaurant operating from a former men’s “comfort station.”
“When you come and see what we’ve done — unless someone has distinct old memories of the space — it would not be apparent,” he said. “We spent over a million bucks restoring it, which on a per-square-foot basis is probably more than Cartier or Tiffany spends on their spaces.”
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dgoodison@bostonherald.com