Boston Herald

From beer, whiskey to champagne

$260M St. Regis reflects new levels of luxury in Hub’s newest neighborho­od

- By Grace Zokovitch gzokovitch@bostonhera­ld.com

Sitting in the footprint of the former Whiskey Priest and Atlantic Beer Garden on the Seaport waterfront, there’s a new 250-foot glass tower built to look like a sail unfurling in the wind.

The old Seaport bars were demolished in 2018 to make way for a new St. Regis installmen­t, swept by the area’s ongoing wave of luxury developmen­t.

The building design was first sketched on a cocktail napkin by architect Howard Elkus during a dinner with the property’s developer, Jon Cronin, and adapted to a $260 million, 22-floor building with 114 residentia­l units.

In the St. Regis, set to open in November, a fourbedroo­m penthouse will cost $15 million.

The price drops to $2 million for lower one-bedroom units, still sweeping the neighborho­od’s $1.8 million median home price, reported by Realtor. com.

The place, St. Regis’s first residentia­l-only establishm­ent, is designed to cocoon permanent residents in the type of living typically reserved for luxury hotel or resort guests — butlers and housekeepi­ng, seaplanes and limousine reservatio­ns, many a St. Regis-signature champagne sabrage, and a thorough swaddling of assistance and amenities.

There’ll be a cognac room, walk-out or Juliet balconies over the ocean, a library, a spa, sauna, steam room, pool, jacuzzi, sport simulator, boardroom, grand lounge, guest suites, among the many provisions.

The bottom two floors will be an American bistro-style restaurant with indoor and outdoor seating, “nice dining, with a casual touch to it,” said Cathy Angelini, director of sales for the St. Regis in Boston.

“So it’s all-inclusive,” said Angelini. “I don’t think you ever have to really leave the building.”

Altogether, a company press release said, “one of the most exclusive properties to ever be built in Boston.”

The tower fits right in with the Seaport skyline now, where even just a decade ago it would have been strikingly out of place.

The area, considered Boston’s newest developmen­t, was for most of the 20th century fairly barren, traversed mostly by fisherman and sailors along the piers and slowly caked in concrete and parking.dddd

Former Mayor Tom Menino began to change the landscape of the South Boston waterfront, dubbing the area the “Innovation District” in 2010 and bringing in billions in city, state and federal investment to reconstruc­t the area.

The rapid upscale climb really kicked in through the 2010’s though, with corporate developers’ understand­ing of the value of waterfront property inside the city.

Current Seaport housing is among the city’s most expensive, beating out Beacon Hill and Back Bay in median housing price per square foot at $1.8K, according to Realtor.com.

But the area’s growth in height, population and wealth is starting to max out, especially along the waterfront, according to the Boston Planning and Developmen­t Agency. The St. Regis is one of the last two residentia­l properties to be completed along the waterfront.

Cronin hit an early wall with the Conservati­on Law Foundation during planning for the tower. With public access to the waterfront shrinking, Cronin and the group compromise­d to keep access around the new St. Regis publicly available.

 ?? ??
 ?? STUART CAHILL PHOTOS / HERALD STAFF ?? SKY’S THE LIMIT: The St. Regis rises along the waterfront in the Seaport District with prices starting at $2 million for a low-level one-bedroom unit. Below, champagne and glasses are staged in the kitchen area of a model unit.
STUART CAHILL PHOTOS / HERALD STAFF SKY’S THE LIMIT: The St. Regis rises along the waterfront in the Seaport District with prices starting at $2 million for a low-level one-bedroom unit. Below, champagne and glasses are staged in the kitchen area of a model unit.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States