Walked through the other morning. The thing that struck me most was just how small it is, not so grand in the end. It's a lobby with some food, seats, and smattering of unusable space. Somehow simultaneously smaller and with more stuff than 100 Fed. It should give some relief to the notoriously overcrowded (at noon) High Street Place.
Speaking of which - I don't dislike the trend of indoor food courts, but I find it sort of baffling. So many fancy new ones keep opening and old ones like the Corner Mall don't seem to have have gained any traction at all. It wouldn't take much capital at all to freshen that place up a bit. It's already very close to being "retro cool." I think a beer license, some neon lights, and an 80's playlist would turn that place around in a second.
As "baffling" as you may find it,
in terms of realized product, for the Boston market, said trend is very very modest. Three legit food halls have opened in nine years, that I'm aware of: the Fenway one, High Street Place, Boston Public Market.
EDIT: thanks to those below who pointed-out additional food halls that are planned... it will be interesting to see if they all come to fruition. I estimate a really high-end one would cost at least $50 million to build-out.
[Yes, the one at Winthrop Center is styled a "food hall," but it has all of four kiosks. The one at 100 Federal has all of three kiosks. Do you feel three-to-four kiosks constitutes a legit "food hall"? I don't.]
And of course, there's a highly obvious reason the trend is so very modest: its monstrously expensive to develop, curate, and operate these food halls. The economics only work if you have a constant dependable stream of affluent students, office workers, tourists, etc., in sufficient quantity. In the wake of the pandemic, there are exactly ZERO on the drawing board for the metro Boston market, that I'm aware of. Thus also an ephemeral trend.
Meanwhile, the notion that the Corner Mall food court hasn't "gained any traction" is ridiculous. It's packed all the time.
It's been able to retain a dozen restaurants, post-COVID. What on earth could you possibly be talking about?
You admit that it's very close to being "retro cool." Given that fortunate emergence, combined with the fact its always packed--why would anyone bother to "freshen it up a bit"? It provides a good service to people who perhaps can't afford the swanker options at High Street Place or Fenway, etc. The only thing that needs to be "turned around" is your poorly-masked class prejudice, as best I can judge...