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Get your day off to a creative start — Boston CreativeMornings bfast next Friday 11/18

Rafael Luna, founding partner of PRAUD, will be speaking on the future of Boston; specifically its potential to intelligently grow from a city to a metropolis. His presentation is based on exclusive research which PRAUD is performing on behalf of the City of Boston for the upcoming book, I Want to be METROPOLITAN. Luna holds a Masters in Architecture from MIT. His work has been featured in numerous publications, and he has exhibited internationally. PRAUD, co-founded with Dongwoo Yim in 2010, is a research and design firm focusing on a contemporary approach to understanding the effects of urbanity and developing architectural process.

Only 150 spots! Get your FREE tix here starting Monday 11/14: http://bostoncreativemornings.eventbrite.com/

Space with a Soul
281 Summer Street
Boston, MA 02210
Friday, November 18, 2011 from 8:30 AM to 10:00 AM (ET)

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Grand Plan #1: Downtown Music Row

Last week I threw out the Grand Plan challenge. I thought it only appropriate that I should reveal one of my very own Grand Plans. Here goes.

I propose a music row along either Temple Street or West Street in Downtown Crossing.

I love music in general and, among many other musicians, Bob Dylan in particular, so I always fall back on the example of Gerde’s Folk City. Dylan came from Minnesota to New York because he heard about the amazingness of one section of Greenwich Village that centered around Gerde’s. Joan Baez, The Clancy Brothers, Pete Seeger, Rev. Gary Davis and many others played there.

Besides New York, I’ve been to two other cities whose music blew me away.

First, tiny Galway Ireland, where musicians stake out their spots on Key Street and play, and the bars all through town have everything from trad Irish music to rock, pop and hip hop bands every day of the week. Everywhere you go there’s live music.

Second, Nashville, Tennessee, another city whose musical reputation outstrips its size. Broadway’s Honky Tonks are totally awesome. 6 or 8 venues with windows open, no cover, music from the early morning to the early morning. My favorite time in Nashville was 10 o’clock Sunday morning drinking coffee with a couple friends at The Stage watching a middle aged guy play amazing country music. I don’t know for sure but I like to imagine that he’s a studio musician and he’s played with everyone I’ve ever heard of.

Both Galway and Nashville provide music lovers with a central location to see original music. While the Boston area has a couple clusters where there are shows (Central Square in Cambridge and Allston come to mind), Downtown is devoid of great music, unless you count the cover bands in Faneuil Hall, which I don’t. We lose when our culture isn’t front and center and convenient to people.

So just imagine getting out of the T at Chinatown, Boylston or Downtown Crossing and then heading over to sample 6 different spots where the best of Berklee, New England Conservatory, Boston Conservatory and all the rest of the bands and musicians who play around Boston can perform in one place. Awesome right? Grand even?

Beyond simple fun, there’s an economic case for this sort of clustering.

The history of creative movements is chock full of amazing artists who knew every other known artist of their particular style. Matisse and Picasso…their works don’t resemble each other’s but they were best friends/rivals.

At the BRA and other economic development organizations, clustering gets a lot of attention. As the theory goes, when you cluster companies in similar industries together, you create more opportunity for collaboration, creativity and healthy competition. With collaboration, creativity and healthy competition comes greater success for all involved. The City’s Innovation District effort is based on this theory writ large. In the Innovation District, the City has extended the concept beyond tradition industry designations, hoping (with significant supporting research) that the clustering of all sorts of industries that require creativity and innovation (biotech, arts, software development, clean technology) will make each industry stronger and more creative and, in turn, make Boston more innovative into the 21st and 22nd centuries.

The same concepts should hold true for culture. If we do a better job of providing musicians and artists with performance space where they can be seen, and where they can interact with each other easily, we will raise Boston’s profile as a cultural city. It always bothers me when I listen to hip hop that no one EVER mentions Boston.

All we need to make this happen is lots of City support and some unknown sum of millions of dollars.

Who wants to make it happen?

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What’s Happening There? – Fan Pier

When you work in government and live in Boston, one of the most popular questions you get asked is, “What is going on with such-and-such project?” Usually it’s about the old Filene’s space in Downtown Crossing or a new high-rise going up somewhere in town and sometimes it’s even about the renovations at Fenway Park. Well, since construction is building towards the ‘better Boston’ that will be lived in, worked in and run by the OneIn3 readers of the present, a recurring column providing updates on these projects would be helpful. So read along and pass on to your friends so we all have a better understanding of exactly what the Boston of tomorrow will look like.

The first in this series will be on the development of $2 billion Fan Pier development on the waterfront in South Boston.

For those that don’t know, Fan Pier is a 23-acre site on the Boston waterfront next to the $170 million federal courthouse (built in 1999) and the World Trade Center/Seaport Hotel complex. If you’ve been to the Barking Crab or Anthony’s Pier 4 Restaurant, the site is near each restaurant and the Institute of Contemporary Art, which relocated to the pier in December 2006. Also not a long walk or Silver line ride down Northern Avenue is the Harpoon Brewery and the Bank of America Pavilion.

This area – commonly referred to as the Seaport District but being refashioned as the Innovation District – has been receiving as much of a makeover as any area of the City in the last 10-20 years. Formerly industrial and maritime commercial, the area is being transformed into an area where businesses center and people want to live. And, until recently, the ‘living’ part of the Seaport District has trailed way behind the ‘working’ part. Several of Boston’s largest law firms and companies call the area home, but only recently has a residential component gone along with it.

Still, with the exception of temporary attractions such as “Puma City” in 2009 and Cirque du Soleil’s OVO last year and a smattering of businesses that include the relocated Louis Boston, the area called Fan Pier has been largely undeveloped thus far. As with most projects attempting to launch in the last few years – cough, Filene’s Downtown Crossing, cough – the down economy led investors to largely pull back. However, when it comes to the Fan Pier development, which was intended to be a blend of office, hotel/retail, residential, and open green space, it was seemingly going to take a major employer willing to relocate to the area to jumpstart the project.

Fan Pier

Last week, that employer finally emerged. Vertex Pharmaceuticals, a Cambridge-based drug manufacturer, has committed to relocating its headquarters to Fan Pier in a move that will bring as many as 1,800 employees to the waterfront. Vertex’s signed letter of intent with the Fan Pier developers, backed strongly by both city and state tax incentives, will likely prove to be exactly what the Fan Pier project needs to push towards completion. The demand for retail and restaurant space – not to mention residential space – caused by moving this many employees into an undeveloped area should prove a significant boon to the ever-expanding Innovation District. Vertex’s commitment is for two or three of the eight planned buildings in Fan Pier, so it will likely be much easier for investors to commit to this project in the near future – thus spurring development throughout the whole Seaport District area. So when you see cranes and scaffolds dotting this area in the next few years, you’ll know why.

What updates do you want? Post a comment on what areas of Boston you’d like to be updated on.

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Welcome Home Challenge – Get in the Innovation District!

Entrepreneurs…we have a very exciting competition to tell you about. We hope you’ll all get in the game.

This past May, Mayor Thomas M. Menino announced a partnership with Spencer Trask Collaborative Innovations (STCI) to create a $25,000 challenge for startups to move or expand in Boston’s Innovation District called…wait for it…The Innovation District Welcome Home Challenge.

The Challenge invites businesses to compete by promoting their business or business plan on a web-based forum. And here’s the kicker:

The public (entrepreneurs, innovators, stakeholders, the general public, funders and organizations) gets to vote on the submissions, supporting the ones they think best fit the Innovation District!

Boston will be the first city – and second government entity – to use this platform. The winning submission will receive a $25,000 prize to locate in the Innovation District; if that business is already in the Innovation District, the funding can be used for that business to grow.

Want to pitch your start-up business or vote on ideas? Create an account at Vencorps.com and enter the Innovation District Welcome Home Challenge.

For more in the Innovation District and recent updates, visit www.InnovationDistrict.org or follow @IDBoston.

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