tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28102666.post1059899833246441757..comments2024-03-28T04:26:30.557-05:00Comments on Boston 1775: Old Corner Burrito ShopUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger10125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28102666.post-40289724604087350572011-07-17T06:38:37.475-05:002011-07-17T06:38:37.475-05:00Pity it should be one the historic sites about it&...Pity it should be one the historic sites about it's hey day as a publishing house as part of the Freedom Trail. I work for the Globe out of that building from 1970 to 1981. In side wer first editions of Hawthorne, Thoreau and Longfellow. A bango clock by Willard, unfortunately we found it stolen one morning. I was mentioning it to my fellow tour guide last Sunday and he told me that the lease was some absorbitant amount. A book store would be hard pressed to afford. Chipotle being franchise would be the only type of business that could afford it. Let us hope the they don't muck with the building too much.Winston Stonenoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28102666.post-54091713434732980832011-07-15T11:21:10.273-05:002011-07-15T11:21:10.273-05:00I was fascinated to hear the latest news about tha...I was fascinated to hear the latest news about that location. For two years, I managed the Globe Corner Bookstore that occupied that location, selling books, maps, and various ephemera related to either New England history or world travel. The GCB later moved to Harvard Square and (so I've read) was slated to close last month. I still remember my colleagues there fondly: Pat, Mark, George, Joanna, Joan, and Tony. It was a privilege to work for a while in one of Boston's historic buildings.<br /><br />Reusing old buildings for eateries is hardly unusual, even on that street alone. When I worked on School Street, the old city hall (built in the 1860s), up the block, served as the home of Maison Robert, a very swanky French restaurant. That too, I gather, has been replaced, in this case by a steakhouse. Plus sa change, plus sa meme chose.Janhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07430151102779191991noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28102666.post-53808716411577258632011-07-14T17:26:34.013-05:002011-07-14T17:26:34.013-05:0020 years ago sitting in a bustling pizzeria in Ven...20 years ago sitting in a bustling pizzeria in Venice incongruously called Bora-Bora being served great food by Hawaiian-shirted waiters and looking across the narrow alley to an empty restaurant with a group of bored traditionally clad waiters inside, I learned a very important, if obvious, fact, businesses, and by extension, cities, that can adapt thrive, those that don't, are doomed.G. Lovelynoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28102666.post-2534158789816460152011-07-14T12:22:48.754-05:002011-07-14T12:22:48.754-05:00We might not like the fast food, and we might pooh...We might not like the fast food, and we might pooh-pooh the plebeian tastes associated with it, but let us not forget that some big companies, as part of being good citizens -and getting a tax break- will sometimes help pay for the restoration of the historic buildings they put their restaurants in. <br /><br />I am thinking of the McDonald's in the center of Freiburg, Germany which paid for some of the restoration of the famous medieval gate Martinstor (Martin's gate), one of the last remnants of Freiburg's medieval walls,in return for getting a very good long-term lease. <br /><br />As part of the agreement, Mcdonalds got permission to put their name (but not the Golden Arches...) on the lower part of the gate. It's too bad there's a Micky D sign on the gate, but there's always been some sort of advertising sign on the gate. <br /><br />http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-lyyZxcWfgQE/TZ0SecDQ80I/AAAAAAAAAi8/ylgtPrh5OnY/s1600/P1030999.jpg<br /><br />By the late 1970s, the donwntown of Freiburg was in pretty dire shape. Before that, the area where the McDonalds sign is now, had been used as the town jail , as well as advertising (in the same spot on the arch) for local businesses, such as dry cleaning and hotels, and it looked pretty seedy. <br /><br />In short, until McDonalds came in, the area was a dump. How do I know this? I lived there when the restoration of the area was completed. So, sometimes, public-private partnerships do pay off, even if not quite in the way we'd expect.RFullernoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28102666.post-36069461199525125222011-07-14T12:05:16.744-05:002011-07-14T12:05:16.744-05:00Although the Union Oyster House is not an official...Although the Union Oyster House is not an official site on the Freedom Trail, the trail's red brick line passes by the front door of the Oyster House, and the family that owns the restaurant has been a major donor to the Freedom Trail Foundation, in exchange for advertising. And they have a room, often rented out for functions, called the Freedom Trail Room.<br /><br />The question of what is, and is not, an official Freedom Trail site, has often been an issue over the years; and the Trail's routing has also been a subject of contention. Many businesses have tried to get the Trail redirected past their door, in anticipation of increased foot traffic.Charles Bahnenoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28102666.post-8549733821434611252011-07-14T11:08:47.364-05:002011-07-14T11:08:47.364-05:00I am not happy about it becoming a restaurant but ...I am not happy about it becoming a restaurant but if the outside stays the same and it doesn't get burned down I'll be happy.Joan Quigleynoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28102666.post-3557467511795095512011-07-14T10:42:06.466-05:002011-07-14T10:42:06.466-05:00The same way you found a big contrast when you mov...The same way you found a big contrast when you moved east, Robert, is how I felt when I visited Europe for the first time. We cherish seventeenth- and eighteenth-century buildings as the oldest stuff around. In London and other parts of Britain, they have so many of those they don’t know what to do with ’em.J. L. Bellhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15405157000473731801noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28102666.post-4884885692312158782011-07-14T10:40:32.851-05:002011-07-14T10:40:32.851-05:00This building makes an interesting contrast with t...This building makes an interesting contrast with the one that houses the Union Oyster House. That structure is also pre-Revolutionary. As the home of Isaiah Thomas, Hopestill Capen, and (briefly) Benjamin Thompson, it has more Revolutionary significance. Yet it’s <i>not</i> on the Freedom Trail because since the early 1800s it’s been an oyster bar—the fast food restaurant of that day.J. L. Bellhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15405157000473731801noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28102666.post-73462099449814587192011-07-14T10:09:35.969-05:002011-07-14T10:09:35.969-05:00From pizza shop (1960) to burrito shop (2011) -- j...From pizza shop (1960) to burrito shop (2011) -- just shows how tastes change, including culinary ones.<br /><br />What's unmentioned here is the role that the Boston Globe, under the ownership of the Taylor family, played in the restoration of the Old Corner. Not only did the Taylors put up a significant amount of the money needed to buy the building and restore it in 1960, they also continued to rent space in the building until 2004. It wasn't until the last of the Taylors were gone, and the New York Times owned the Globe, that the newspaper moved out. Of course, newspapers seem to be another dying breed.<br /><br />Fifty years ago, historians argued that the pizza shop was degrading this historic building, which is why they had to step in and restore it.<br /><br />At least the structure is, and will continue to be, owned by a nonprofit preservation organization, so suitable restrictive covenants should be in place. And the billboards that once defaced the exterior of the building probably won't be allowed this time.<br /><br />As I understand, Historic Boston, the building's owner, intends to use rental income from the property as a revenue stream to finance their preservation efforts elsewhere in the city.Charles Bahnenoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-28102666.post-33927671211776719902011-07-14T10:01:50.261-05:002011-07-14T10:01:50.261-05:00You've kind of reminded me of something intere...You've kind of reminded me of something interesting about moving East as I did.<br /><br />In California, anything more than 75 years old is considered historical. There are the Missions, of course, which are much older, but for the most part, the real historical buildings are from the 30s (and a few from the 1890s).<br /><br />Here in New England, we have all sort of historical sites and buildings from the early to mid 18th century, and a few even older.<br /><br />Then you go to Europe, or the Middle East, or Asia....Robert S. Paulhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06208771657848284055noreply@blogger.com