Archive for ‘Uncategorized’

Southie’s SoWa District

By Jeremy, 15 February, 2010, 4 Comments

A couple blocks south of Washington Street, the SoWa district is home to dozens of art galleries and studios. Artists, both well-established (Sandy Litchfield, Hisham Bizri at Toale Gallery ) and new to the scene (22-year-old Mark Chariker at RHYS) share spaces.

A former mill building district where pianos, canned goods, shoes and other merchandise were made in the 19th century, the district has been home to artists’ studios carved out of the old factories for the last fifty years. Today, the artists have been joined by art galleries, creative businesses, cutting edge restaurants and residential loft buildings.

The SoWa Art Walk takes place in late May each year and is a weekend-long standing invitation to visit the artists in their studios. www.SoWaArtwalk.com

The SoWa Open Market, an open-air venue for artists, craftsmen, collectioners, farmstands and other vendors makes its seasonal debut each year in tandem with the SoWa Art Walk. www.SoWaOpenMarket.com
The SoWa Antiques Market features over fifty antiques vendors will display in the fabled Power Station at 540 Harrison Avenue. www.SoWaAntiquesMarket.com.

SoWa Food & Produce Market tempts everyone at 500 Harrison Ave.

Read about all at www.SoWaSundays.com

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Union Oyster House

By Jeremy, 22 November, 2009, 1 Comment

Union Oyster House, 41 Union Street, (617) 227-2750, www.unionoysterhouse.com, is around the corner from Faneuil Hall. Yes, it’s old (open 1826, it bills itself as the oldest continuously operating restaurant in the nation), and very touristy. But kids can visit the Freedom Trail room to spot the carvings and displays of the main stops on the trail and chow down on a fish filet sandwich ($7.95) or hot dog ($4.95), while adults enjoy a bowl of creamy clam chowder ($5.50).

The Clarendon Square Inn

By Jeremy, 22 November, 2009, 2 Comments

The Clarendon Square Inn

198 West Brookline Street; 617-536-2229; www.clarendonsquare.com is a beautiful surprise. The rooms in this brownstone have been elegantly renovated with antique tubs, fine linens and serene furnishings. Every detail is lovely.

Rooms are $150 to $385, May through August.


Southie: Sausage @ The Butcher Shop

By Jeremy, 22 November, 2009, No Comment

The Butcher Shop
552 Tremont Street, 617-423-4800
www.thebutchershopboston.com

You can buy meat and racks of lamb from small local producers, artisanal cheeses and a range of handmade sausages. Don’t leave without ordering the magnificent Hot Dog à la Maison: a bratwurst made downstairs, cooked with Gruyère and served with rosemary potato chips. The Butcher Shop opened two years ago but still feels like a local secret.

It’s open every day, 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. or midnight.

Shopping @ Sooki

By Jeremy, 22 November, 2009, 2 Comments

Sooki
505 Tremont Street, 617-536-080
www.sookiboston.com

Sooki is a women’s clothing shop where Jesse, a border collie who belongs to the shop’s owner, Suzan Griffith, will herd you inside from the sidewalk with lots of friendly licks; it’s also the kind of place that will excite the most jaded cosmopolitan shopper.

Sooki sells many cool things, including one-of-a-kind dresses from boutique designers in France and Japan.

Southie: Cyclorama @ Boston Center for the Arts

By Jeremy, 22 November, 2009, 1 Comment

Cyclorama @ Boston Center for the Arts
539 Tremont Street, 617-426-5000
www.bcaonline.org

Catch an avant-garde art exhibition or a contemporary play at the Cyclorama. This 23,000-square-foot rotunda is part of the Boston Center for the Arts, and also offers a range of community events and is home to the Community Music Center of Boston, the Boston Ballet Costume Shop, three small theaters and a rehearsal studio.

Southie: Boston Convention and Exhibition Center

By Jeremy, 22 November, 2009, 2 Comments

Boston Convention and Exhibition Center
415 Summer Street, 617-954-2000
www.mccahome.com

The 1.6 million-square-foot convention and exhibition center was designed by Rafael Viñoly. It has become a magnet for developers. Old industrial buildings in the surrounding blocks are being turned into office buildings and condos. There are even plans for a luxury hotel.

Southie: Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston (ICA)

By Jeremy, 22 June, 2009, 2 Comments

Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston
100 Northern Avenue, 617-478-3101
www.icaboston.org

ICA is a visionary glass box designed by Diller Scofidio + Renfro that cantilevers over the waterfront, the neighborhood is finally emerging as a vibrant arts district, with destination restaurants, green parks and condos.

As Boston’s first new art museum in decades, the I.C.A. is already a cultural cornerstone, with rotating exhibitions and a permanent collection with works by Nan Goldin, Cornelia Parker and Julian Opie.

Visitors can dine at its Water Cafe (run by Wolfgang Puck Catering), and the adjacent plaza merges with the newly expanded Boston HarborWalk, designed to reconnect the harbor to the rest of the city (though immediately surrounding the museum itself are a number of vast parking lots).

Boston Liberty Hotel (Former Jail Gone Upscale)

By Jeremy, 22 June, 2009, 1 Comment

OVERVIEW

The completion of the Charles Street Jail in 1851 was a milestone of design, bringing the architect Gridley James Fox Bryant’s stately, rough-hewn granite style to the edge of the Charles River. The jail closed in 1990 and has been transformed into a luxury hotel after a $150 million restoration.

The result preserved much of the original stone and brickwork while adding touches like Gothic-style chandeliers that tower over a lobby lounge. Many cell bars remain as well, cleverly backlighted by ever-changing shades of lavender and chartreuse. And while most of the 298 rooms are stacked in a new tower, 18 are in the original jail, connected by catwalk-like terraces that guards once patrolled.

BEACON HILL LOCATION

Situated at the northern edge of Beacon Hill, overlooking the Charles River. It’s an easy walk to the Boston Common and the Back Bay neighborhood, and a stone’s throw from a subway station (Charles Street/Massachusetts General Hospital on the Red Line).

THE ROOMS

Book “Basic Jail” or “Breathtaking Jail.” The “jails” are both cozy and oddly airy, with exposed-brick walls and floor-to-ceiling windows that offered river and city views. The modern furnishings included an off-white divan, black lacquered desk and dresser and an earthy merino throw at the foot of the plush white bed. A 32-inch flat-panel TV sat above the mini-bar, and an elegant vase was filled with flowers. Instead of the typical “Do not disturb” card, the doorknob sign read: “Solitary.”

THE BATHROOM

Spacious and well-equipped, including a large bathtub, glass-doored shower with excellent water pressure, plenty of towels, Molton Brown products, two luffas and a couple of silky, terry-cloth lined robes. A granite floor matched the overall design.

RESTAURANTS

Scampo, the hotel’s upscale Italian restaurant whereas Clink, a cool and casual place with a lot of exposed brick and original cell bars, offered a delicious array of small plates, including artisanal cheeses served with grilled cranberry-pecan bread ($10 to $15). The same menu is also served at the atmospheric lobby bar, a clutch of red velvet banquettes and leather ottomans popular with post-work crowds in business attire.

Later, the cocktail action moves to the Alibi bar, housed in the former drunk tank that now features real, blown-up mug shots of celebrities like Mick Jagger (who was spotted at Clink in September) and Lindsay Lohan.

AMENITIES

The gym is small, and there’s no spa. The hotel offers Wi-Fi ($10.99 a day), local car service in rush hour at no extra charge and, remote airport baggage check-in screened by the Transportation Security Administration.

ROOM SERVICE

Very good room service. Try the tasty Cheddar and asparagus frittata ($20) came with delicious potatoes and copious toast triangles.

THE BOTTOM LINE

It’s a well-done theme hotel that plays its schtick to perfection, making you feel like one privileged inmate. Doubles start at $319. Liberty Hotel, 215 Charles Street, Boston; (617) 224-4000; www.libertyhotel.com.

Nine Zero Hotel (Bring Your Pooch)

By Jeremy, 22 May, 2009, 1 Comment

Nine Zero
90 Tremont Street, (617) 772-5800
www.ninezero.com.

OVERVIEW

A fabulous Kimpton hotel!

Finally, a hotel for dog-loving, yoga-practicing, environmentally conscious history buffs. Nine Zero, near the Beacon Hill area of Boston and within easy walking distance of the city’s Freedom Trail, is part of the Kimpton hotel chain, which promotes itself as offering a “premium guest experience through nonintrusive, high-quality, eco-friendly products and services.” Thus, the hotel says it uses environmentally friendly cleaning products, prints its materials on recycled paper with soy-based ink and that its coffee is “organic, shade-grown and/or fair-trade.” Oh, and you’re expected to do your part as well: Guests are reminded that it helps the environment if you reuse your towels.

THE LOOK

Sleekly designed and kind of hip (particularly by Boston standards), the 190-room, 19-story, red-brick and limestone hotel is fronted by a discreet — in fact, almost easy to miss — facade on bustling Tremont Street, and the coolly elegant lobby is dominated by polished marble floors, dark wood finishes and boldly striped club chairs in an inviting sitting area. (The sitting area looks, in fact, like a great place to hang out and read a good book, but avoid doing so from 5 to 6 p.m., when the hotel offers glasses of wine to guests and the place is jammed.) Guest rooms continue the design theme of dark woods and boldly patterned fabrics, and some on the upper floors have sweeping views of downtown Boston.

THE ROOMS

Elegantly appointed, but a little cramped for space, especially the standard-size rooms, which are dominated by large beds and ergonomic chairs and desks. A somewhat uncomfortable side chair is more suitable as a holding space for discarded clothes than as a place to sit while you’re watching TV. The marble bathrooms, though, are huge, with a large, glassed-enclosed shower big enough for two. The minibar, in addition to offering the usual snacks and drinks, also sells Stirrings brand Lemon Drop and cosmo mixes ($25 each).

AMENITIES

In your room you’ll find an “In-Room Mind, Body, Spa” guide, which, among other things, includes five illustrated yoga poses to try out, along with offers of a yoga mat and core-strengths bands from the concierge.

Guests who bring their dogs are provided an in-room pet bed at no extra charge, as well as a pet bowl and a “welcome treat.”

The hotel’s small fitness center has only free weights and a few treadmills, but guests can also get a daily pass to the Bally’s gym, one block away. The hotel’s restaurant, KO Prime, is among the city’s most highly regarded steakhouses.

ROOM SERVICE

A breakfast of pancakes ($11) and grapefruit juice ($3) ordered at 9:25 a.m. and promised “within 20 minutes” arrived exactly 13 minutes later. Room-service orders come with a built-in 18 percent tip and a $3 delivery charge.

THE CROWD

During the week, visiting business executives looking for a conveniently located and slightly hipper alternative to the Intercontinental or the Four Seasons. On the weekend, young couples who want to be near the city’s night life, families who want easy access to its tourist attractions (Faneuil Hall and Quincy Market are just a few blocks away) and dog owners who want to take their pets for a romp in nearby Boston Common.

THE BOTTOM LINE

Even if you care nothing about staying in a “green hotel” and the notion of traveling with a dog seems like the worst idea in the world, Nine Zero still offers a pleasant diversion in a city that isn’t exactly overflowing with innovative hotels. Standard rooms (called “deluxe”) start at around $329 on week nights, $279 weekends.

Nine Zero, 90 Tremont Street, (617) 772-5800, www.ninezero.com.