Property Types Office
Battle Continues Over Sale of Boston City Hall 
May 20, 2008
By: Scott Baltic, Contributing Editor

Since the day in 1962 when its design was unveiled, Boston's City Hall has been both admired and detested, loved by the architectural community and history aficionados and hated by many others, including a succession of Boston mayors.

Described by one detractor as “a heavily muscled, thick-fingered, knuckle-dragging, semi-monstrous intransigent brute with a slow stupid stare,” the building belongs to an architectural style known as Brutalism, which celebrates rough textures; angular, blocky shapes; and exposed concrete.

The building received an Honor Award from the American Institute of Architects in 1969, yet in 2004 the Project for Public Spaces named Government Center plaza, where city hall sits, as the world’s single worst public plaza. Amid ongoing complaints about, among other things, the building’s excessive energy usage, in December 2006 Mayor Thomas Menino proposed selling both city hall and its plaza to private developers and relocating the city’s seat of government to a waterfront site in South Boston. Menino had previously floated the idea of moving city hall in 1998, though nothing came of it at that time.

Meanwhile, in April 2007, the Boston Landmarks Commission agreed to consider the building for designation as an historic landmark. Now another group has joined the fray. The newly formed Citizens for City Hall is lobbying for keeping city hall where it is, in the heart of the city, and revitalizing it into “a green, state-of-the art public building.”

Co-founder Herbert Gleason, now an attorney in private practice, spent 11 years working in the building as a corporation counsel for the city and is unabashed about his feelings: “I always loved the building.” In particular, he admires the public spaces on the lower floors and the adaptability of the office spaces on the upper floors. “It is very grand on the lower levels,” he said, adding that he suspects that the building’s critics “think it’s too grand for Boston." Better lighting for the building’s very high-ceilinged rooms, and more foliage and more public activities on the plaza outside, he contended, would go a long way toward mollifying those who are unhappy about city hall.

In any case, Gleason said, relocating city hall and turning the current site over to developers would be a legal minefield. Not only would the majority of the current city council oppose the move, but because the Massachusetts constitution protects public spaces, the state legislature would have to approve the sale. Gleason called the road to privatizing the city hall site “very stony.”

 
Recent Office Headlines
Tenet Healthcare Takes 165,000 SF in Downtown Dallas
Tenet Healthcare Corp., an owner of hospitals and other medical facilities nationwide, is planning to move its headquarters to Downtown Dallas. The company, which only moved to the Dallas area from Southern California in 2004, will lease about 165,000 square feet for 10 years at the 1.2 million-square-foot Fountain Place at 1445 Ross Ave.
Eaton Vance Funds Grab Two-Building Suburban D.C. Office Complex for $95M
A two-building office property occupied by CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield in Owings Mills, Md., has been sold to two owners.
Tech Firm Renews Lease of Orange County Home
TechSpace will be able to call the buildings at 65 and 75 Enterprise in Aliso Viejo, Calif., home for quite some time now that the company has signed a long-term lease with property owner RREEF.
Construction Kicks Off on Tech Firm's Office Building in Loveland
Ground has broken on Waltham, Mass.-based Constant Contact Inc.'s new 50,000-square-foot office building in Loveland, Colo. Located near the intersection of Rocky Mountain Ave. and Test Dr. in Precision Office Park at Centerra, the build-to-suit facility will mark the e-mail marketing provider's first foray beyond its corporate headquarters home in Massachusetts. McWhinney is on board to oversee development activity, and Dohn Construction is serving as general contractor. Work is scheduled to reach completion in early 2009.
Financing for Suburban Boston Portfolio Paves Way for Repositioning
A financing deal valued at $27 .4 million has closed for a group of five office buildings totaling 226,000 square feet in Needham, Mass.