odurandina
Senior Member
- Joined
- Dec 1, 2015
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Durgin Park can't close! WTF!
I don't want to hear about how "tastes are changing". It has been open since 1827. I am sure that tastes have changed a bit since then and they managed to survive that plus two world wars and a great depression.
Remember, the owner of the Faneuil Hall ground-lease, Ashkenazy, has been pissing off a diverse array of stakeholders for years with their misguided vision and clumsy tactics:
https://www.bostonglobe.com/business/2014/12/15/merchants/uCFJHBsTD6lTKtpt0jBIsL/story.html
https://www.wbur.org/cognoscenti/2015/05/14/street-artists-simon-waxman
https://commonwealthmagazine.org/economy/walsh-plays-hardball-at-quincy-market/
Not blaming them. But, the combination of Faneuil Hall inevitably losing restaurant market share to other up-and-coming restaurant districts (DTX, Seaport), combined with the landlord's blunders, surely played a role alongside the restaurant's own fade/decline.
Boston Globe said:Joe O’Malley, general manager of Faneuil Hall Marketplace, said in a statement Thursday, “Durgin-Park is still under a lease agreement with Faneuil Hall Marketplace. No formal closing notification has been submitted.” Attempts to glean further comment were unsuccessful Thursday night.
{...}
Durgin-Park occupies several floors, including a basement bar called the HideOut, the street-level Gaslight Pub, a main dining room on the second floor, and another function room above that.
Remember, the owner of the Faneuil Hall ground-lease, Ashkenazy, has been pissing off a diverse array of stakeholders for years with their misguided vision and clumsy tactics:
https://www.bostonglobe.com/business/2014/12/15/merchants/uCFJHBsTD6lTKtpt0jBIsL/story.html
https://www.wbur.org/cognoscenti/2015/05/14/street-artists-simon-waxman
https://commonwealthmagazine.org/economy/walsh-plays-hardball-at-quincy-market/
Not blaming them. But, the combination of Faneuil Hall inevitably losing restaurant market share to other up-and-coming restaurant districts (DTX, Seaport), combined with the landlord's blunders, surely played a role alongside the restaurant's own fade/decline.
The real story here is just how completely Ashkenazy has screwed up its management and vision for Quincy Market. The spot has limitless potential and a phenomenal setting. But from the start they have failed to reimagine how the asset can be used. They have approached it with the same stale strategy as that employed in 1995. There are so many cool urban markets around the country...sadly this (one of the original) hasn't evolved. The retail tenancy is that of a failing suburban mall. The food vendors are the same bland roster that have been there for thirty years. What a shame.
And higher minimum wages according to the article.
And again, they managed to survive the original introduction of minimum wage, so...
They're open to selling so feel free to make an offer.
Then raise the prices!
I'm intrigued. I think I have a sense of the alternative that you're suggesting here, but would love to hear you elaborate and give some examples...