District Hall, once the Seaport’s only public civic gathering place, remains closed more than a year beyond the renovation timeline given to the community.
This building on Seaport Boulevard shut its doors in January 2024. It was previously used for community meetings, civic functions and elections.
At the time, WS Development, the property’s manager, told the community the closure would last no more than six to ten months. Eighteen months later, the building remains shuttered, and the company has not provided an updated reopening schedule.
In a statement given over email, WS Development said, “We're excited to unveil this reimagined hub for collaboration and celebration in the coming months,” but did not respond to multiple attempts `to clarify a timeline or reason for the prolonged closure.
“There’s
no city of Boston civic space in the 02210 zip code,” said Tom Ready, a
leader at the Fort Point Neighborhood Association (FPNA).
“The
neighborhoods have been advocating for that going back to when the
Seaport was laid out, going back 20 years. That is failure in the
execution of the plan to create and designate civic space.”
Before
the shutdown, the FPNA held monthly meetings at the hall, and the city
used the space for voting in the 2022 and 2023 elections. Since then,
residents have been making do with less than ideal alternatives.
“It’s
honestly required a bit more work on our end to secure space when we
need it,” Ready said. “In the past, it was District Hall regardless of
the size of the meeting. In January, we’d book the full year. Now, we
have to reserve space in two locations and make a decision on what we
think the attendance will be.”
“Frankly,
it’s more of a problem with the election. We’re now in the second or
third location since this happened. We’re voting in the lobby of a
commercial building,” Ready continued.
The
unpredictability requires volunteers for the neighborhoods’ various
civic organizations to jump through extra hoops to keep the community
engaged and informed.
District
Hall opened in 2013 as part of an agreement between the city and
Seaport developers, intended to provide a civic anchor in a neighborhood
dominated by private development.
The
owner at the time, Morgan Stanely, reached an agreement with the Boston
Planning and Development Agency (BPDA) to provide the civic space as
part of a payment in lieu of taxes program. When WS Development
purchased the property as part of the Seaport Square development
project, they agreed to honor the remainder of the 10-year agreement.
In
2023, District Hall came up in a BPDA “South Boston Waterfront Library
Needs Assessment” as an ideal central location for a potential library.
However, a statement from the BPDA affirmed that the city is not
participating in planning or funding any construction at the privately
owned parcel.
“The
need for libraries is fairly well-documented. We’d just have to make
sure it has a community room big enough to support public gatherings and
voting,” Ready said. “We kind of look around and see public services
that are available in other communities, paid for and sponsored by the
city, that just aren’t available in our neighborhood because the space
isn’t available.”