Re: Shreve, Crump & Low bldng may be replaced w/ new develop
Shreve building fight heads toward court
By Greg Turner
Friday, November 21, 2008
Diana Eckstein figures if the Boston Landmarks Commission can?t see the architectural value of the former Shreve, Crump & Low building in Boston, then an ?actual judge? just might.
The lawyer will appeal to Suffolk Superior Court to keep alive an effort to save the 104-year-old, art deco-style edifice overlooking the Public Garden.
Hub developer Ronald Druker won approval in October from the Boston Redevelopment Authority for his $120 million plan to demolish 330 Boylston St. and replace it with an office-and-retail building.
But last month, a group led by Eckstein petitioned the city to give the building ?landmark? status. A similar effort two years ago failed.
This time the panel voted, 5-2, not to accept the petition, nipping a second review in the bud.
?The decision wasn?t for the city, it wasn?t with the people in mind, it wasn?t with the historical or architectural significance of the building in mind,? said Eckstein. ?It was politically motivated.?
Eckstein, noting Mayor Thomas M. Menino?s support for Druker?s development, said she?d have a ?better chance of winning? in court.
The Druker Co. issued a statement saying it will continue with the planning stage of its project. ?We are confident that the (Landmarks Commission decision) will be upheld,? it said.
Bryan Glascock, director of the city?s Environment Department, said the Landmarks Commission did extensive research to determine the building?s value.
?A lot of the issues the petitioners put forward really didn?t pan out,? he said. ?It wasn?t a unanimous decision (this time) but a majority felt the building was not significant beyond the local level.?
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