Prudential Center (shopping mall)
Coordinates | 42°20′54″N 71°04′57″W / 42.34846°N 71.08262°W |
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Address | 800 Boylston Street Boston, Massachusetts 02199 |
Opening date | 1993 |
Previous names | Shops at Prudential Center |
Developer | The Hahn Company |
Management | Boston Properties |
Owner | Boston Properties |
Architect | Sikes, Jennings, Kelly & Brewer |
No. of stores and services | 75 |
No. of anchor tenants | 1 |
Total retail floor area | 500,914 sq ft (46,536.4 m2) |
No. of floors | 1 (2 in Saks Fifth Avenue) |
Public transit access | Prudential: |
Website | prudentialcenter |
[1][2] |
The Prudential Center (colloquially the Pru) is an enclosed shopping mall within the mixed-use Prudential Center complex in the Back Bay neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts. It is located at the base of the Prudential Tower, and provides direct indoor connections to several nearby destinations, including the Hynes Convention Center, the office towers at 101 and 111 Huntington Avenue, and the Sheraton Boston hotel. The mall is connected to the Copley Place shopping mall via a skybridge over Huntington Avenue.[3] As of 2022, the complex features notable brands such as Saks Fifth Avenue, Earl's, Lacoste, Club Monaco, Ralph Lauren, and Vineyard Vines.
Description
A Mandarin Oriental hotel is part of the complex, as well as the Avalon and the Belvidere Residences apartments.
The shopping complex is anchored by Saks Fifth Avenue. The mall is home to over 75 specialty retailers, including upscale stores such as Earl's, Lacoste, Club Monaco, Ralph Lauren, Vineyard Vines, and more. Around 20 food-related businesses ranging from quick snacks to fine dining are located at the mall, with many other independent restaurants located nearby outside. A 45,000-square-foot (4,200 m2) open-market format Eataly location was opened in November 2016, replacing a former food court within the mall.
Transportation connections include the Prudential subway station and the nearby Hynes Convention Center station, both on branches of the MBTA Green Line. The Back Bay multimodal station, with access to the MBTA Orange Line, MBTA Commuter Rail, and Amtrak inter-city rail, is a short climate-controlled walk away via the adjacent Copley Place shopping mall. MBTA bus routes 39, 54, and 507 stop at the center, and there is underground parking available on-site.[4][5]
St. Francis Chapel
The St. Francis Chapel, a functioning Roman Catholic chapel staffed by the Oblates of the Virgin Mary and located inside the shopping center since 1969, offers daily services and a religious giftshop.[6]
It was originally staffed by the Franciscans who had come to Boston to establish the Shrine of St. Anthony in 1947.[7] It was designed by Brother Cajetan Baumann, OFM, the head of Franciscan Art and Architecture Office and built by Cambridge's Thomas O'Connor Company.[7]
The original chapel was first dedicated on November 11, 1969, by Cardinal Richard Cushing.[7] A crowd of 400, almost double its official capacity, crowded into the chapel for the dedication.[7] Cushing said at the time he wanted it to be an "ecumenical chapel. We want people of all faiths to come here and speak to God through their own prayers."[7] Present at the dedication was Fr. Robert Lynch, OFM, the chapel's first director.[7]
On June 1, 1983, the Franciscans turned over the Chapel to the Oblates of the Virgin Mary.[7] In 1986, construction forced that chapel to close and a new chapel to be reopened near the entrance of the Hynes Convention Center.[7] This chapel, which is still in operation, was dedicated on April 28, 1993, by Cardinal Bernard Law.[7]
History
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The location originally consisted of marshlands next to the Charles River in the Back Bay district of Boston. These wetlands were gradually filled in, and a large railyard was built. In the early 1960s, the railyard was replaced by the Prudential Tower and several smaller buildings.[citation needed]
Originally, only one department store (Saks), along with a handful of shops, existed around the base of the Prudential Tower in a small shopping arcade. Nearby structures including the Hynes Convention Center, 101 Huntington Avenue office tower, a Sheraton Hotel, and other various shops were separated by open plazas in a patchwork of disjointed buildings.[citation needed]
A large, windswept paved plaza off Boylston Street was dominated by a 27-foot (8.2 m) sculptural bronze male nude by Boston-educated artist Donald Harcourt De Lue, titled Quest Eternal, and installed in 1967. Popularly known as "The Naked Guy",[8] the 5-ton sculpture, cast in one piece, depicted a Mannerist heroic figure stretched diagonally upwards towards the sky.[9][10] The Boston Christmas Tree, annually donated by Nova Scotia, was placed on this plaza from 1971[11] until 2002, when it was moved to the Boston Common.[12]
In 1991, a plan was put forth to connect all of the buildings together with an enclosed and expanded shopping center, in the area bordered by Boylston Street, Huntington Avenue, and Dalton Street. The Hahn Company, together with then-owner Prudential Insurance Company of America, spent over two years developing the $100 million project.[citation needed]
In 1993, the new Shops at Prudential Center was completed, and largely successful in filling its new spaces.[13] Multiple buildings surrounding the Prudential Center were now connected through the shopping arcade, with pedestrian traffic ranging from office workers to convention attendees, able to travel conveniently to various destinations regardless of the weather.
In 2014, a new entrance to the Prudential Center was built to replace the remaining open plaza bordering Boylston Street. This required that the Quest Eternal statue be removed, and its whereabouts and future were unknown to the general public.[9] In 2019, the Boston City Council announced that it had accepted the donation of the statue from Boston Properties, and would install it in the public Smith Playground, near the intersection of Western Avenue and North Harvard Street in the Allston district.[14][8] There remain several smaller works of public art at the Prudential Center complex, including temporary art installations.[15]
On August 24, 2020, it was announced that high end regional division Lord & Taylor would close.[16] On June 30, 2022, it was announced that Dick's Sporting Goods was in final negotiations to take over the Lord & Taylor building at the center for its House of Sports concept store.[17]
Reception
In November 2019, the online business news website MassLive rated the Shops at Prudential Center as fifth, and the immediately adjacent Copley Place as fourth-best, among 40 malls and shopping centers in Massachusetts.[18]
Gallery
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Interior of promenade (July 2011)
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Lord & Taylor (now closed) entrance at Prudential Center (2007)
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Entrance at corner of Huntington Avenue and Belvidere Street
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Pedestrian crossroads inside mall
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Shinola retail location (2017)
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View of the Prudential Tower from The Shops at Prudential Center (2012)
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Publicly-accessible outdoors roofdeck garden at base of the Prudential Tower
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Pedestrian skybridge connects Copley Place mall (at right) to Prudential Center shops
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Prudential MBTA subway station entrance at the mall
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Original architectural rendering shows discrete buildings separated by outdoors plazas
References
- ^ "The Shops at Prudential Center". Boston Properties. Archived from the original on 8 July 2011. Retrieved 14 March 2011.
- ^ "About The Shops at Prudential Center". The Shops at Prudential Center. Retrieved 14 March 2011.
- ^ "Shopping". Massachusetts Office of Travel & Tourism. Retrieved 14 March 2011.
- ^ "How to get to Prudential Center in Boston by Bus, Subway or Train?". Moovit. Retrieved 10 April 2024.
- ^ "Getting Here". The Shops at Prudential Center. Retrieved 3 April 2017.
- ^ "Oblates of the Virgin Mary". St. Francis Chapel. Retrieved 12 March 2020.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Lester, Thomas (15 November 2024). "The dedication of St. Fracis Chapel in the Prudential Center". The Pilot. p. 19.
- ^ a b Adamg (23 September 2019). "City to put the old Prudential naked-guy statue in an Allston park". Universal Hub. Retrieved 12 March 2020.
- ^ a b Kaplan, Aline (3 May 2018). "Boston's Missing: "Quest Eternal" at the Pru". aknextphase.com. Retrieved 12 March 2020.
- ^ "Quest Eternal: Donald De Lue, Boston Art Commission and Prudential Center". CultureNOW. Retrieved 12 March 2020.
- ^ "Boston's Prudential Christmas Tree Has A History Of Its Own" (Press release). 3 December 1998. Retrieved 1 January 2015.
- ^ Leccese, Mark (29 September 2002). "'Tis Not: No Room At the Pru". The Boston Globe. p. 3.
- ^ Biddle, Frederic M. (14 November 1993). "Captive Audience: New Boston Mall Links Convention Center, Hotels". Chicago Tribune. The Boston Globe. Retrieved 3 April 2017.
- ^ "'Quest Eternal' statue moving to Smith Playground in Allston". Boston.gov. Boston City Council. 20 September 2019. Retrieved 12 March 2020.
- ^ "Public Art Program". Prudential Center. Retrieved 12 March 2020.
- ^ "More Lord + Taylor stores closing: Liquidation sales are underway as part of company's bankruptcy amid COVID-19". USA Today.
- ^ "Register". www.bizjournals.com. Retrieved 12 September 2023.
- ^ LaFratta, Kristin (23 November 2019). "40 Massachusetts malls and shopping centers ranked from the worst to the best". MassLive. Retrieved 9 March 2020.