HomeGoods is opening in the former H&M space in Downtown Crossing. Now it will be Marshalls, HomeGoods, and TJ Maxx all in a row. I bet they got a good deal on rent.
^^I don't believe Kings has its own on-street entrance either. Nor does the movie theater (which, BTW, has been a ghost town the 5 or 6 times I've gone up to check it out). Kings are always busy.
I think it's a lack of marketing. They have had nearly no advertising for the theater. If I didn't work in the seaport, I wouldn't have known it was there either.
The other week I was in NYC and I tried Xi'an famous foods - it was absolutely fantastic. So I poked around online and saw that it plans to come to Boston, but the plans seem to be a bit delayed. The last update I found is that they plan to come by YE2019. Does anyone have any updates?
https://boston.eater.com/2017/11/3/16602448/xian-street-foods-brighton-opening
Trillium Brewing Company has been anything but quiet since announcing plans to open a restaurant in Fort Point nearly two years ago—its Canton brewery debuted an outdoor patio and bar, Trillium returned to the Greenway for another seasonal beer garden, it hosted its first beer fest, and the growing family company has announced plans to add a farm-brewery in Connecticut. But the team hasn’t said much about the Fort Point expansion—until now. Get excited: the Trillium restaurant is on track to open later this month, with three floors of beer and farm-to-table fare.
^ I remember back when the Globe was worth reading (does that make me old?)
Honestly, as an assignment, this wasn't a bad "local flavor" reporting idea... but executed with all the nuance and finesse of a middle school newspaper. Cringeworthy.
^ I remember back when the Globe was worth reading (does that make me old?)
Honestly, as an assignment, this wasn't a bad "local flavor" reporting idea... but executed with all the nuance and finesse of a middle school newspaper. Cringeworthy.
I liked it. The point in the end is that in both places have a bunch of people living, working, and having fun. The style is different, but the human element is the same. The message is one of unity rather than poking the other guy in the eye.
I'm old enough to remember a time when not everything in media was about sowing division and slinging insults.