Design Diary: Tour The Verb Hotel in Boston’s Fenway

Last time I was in town I scored a private tour of The Verb Hotel with Elizabeth Lowrey, Principal and Director of Interior Architecture at Elkus Manfredi Architects and stylish lead behind the redesign of this humble-turned-hip Boston boutique hotel, just behind Fenway Park. The architects worked closely with the development team to embrace the area’s legacy .

Initially slated for a tear down—the hotel had become a HoJos after all—Samuels became disillusioned by the shiny new development happening all over the city and decided to re-imagine the 94-room mid-century modern hotel, knowing it would add character to the revitalized neighborhood.

The Verb Hotel first opened in 1959 as the Fenway Motor Hotel in a neighborhood that by the thriving indie music scene. Over the years a multitude of clubs popped up on Lansdowne Street, along with the alternative weekly newspaper the Boston Phoenix and rock radio stations.

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Developer Steve Samuels and hotelier Robin Brown enlisted “vibe conservators” Stephen Mindich, publisher of the Boston Phoenix, and David Bieber, WBCN Creative Services Director to consult with Elkus Manfredi on the hotel’s new look and feel, which pays homage to the rock scene of the ’70s and ’80s. Bieber dipped into his enormous personal archives of pop-culture memorabilia which the designers used to decorate the lobby.

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The two-story modernist building, designed by architects Irving Salsberg and Ralph Leblanc, went up in 1959. Elkus Manfredi Architects honored the original building, retaining the footprint of the motel and guestrooms. The feel is that of an authentic motor inn, including a courtyard pool and cars pulled up outside the rooms.

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The team stuck to a pretty strict budget. Easy upgrades like colored film by Solar Graphics were applied to the new windows to add rhythmic pops of color. In 1959 when the original motel was completed, different colored stained-glass windows formed solid vertical lines on its structure. Eventually, these windows were replaced and the solid vertical stripes of color became irregular. When replacing all the windows for the restoration, Elkus Manfredi deliberately retained the irregular Mondrian-like pattern.

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The architects dressed up a front façade with vertical wood siding and simple landscaping.

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A circular skylight in the lobby lets in light and provides a glimpse of a new high rise across the street.

The Verb Boston Boutique Hotel Lobby Desk

The front desk is upholstered in tufted black leather. Amps and electric guitars are propped up beside it. Black and white geometric flooring by Mondo.

The Verb Boston Boutique Hotel Lobby Banquettte

The lobby, with its deep blue walls and tufted yellow leather banquette custom-designed by Elkus Manfredi Architects broadcasts that it is indeed a Boston boutique hotel. Authentic vintage music ephemera, curated by David Bieber from his own collection, include backstage passes from the J. Geils Band, and torn $4.50 ticket stubs to a Blondie show at the Paradise on Commonwealth Avenue. Framing done locally by Stanhope Framers. Triangular Island tables by Calligaris. Knoll Risom lounge chairs designed in 1943 by Jens Risom and sheepskin throw both from Design Within Reach.

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Music posters and vinyl records along with a vintage jukebox.

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Original brickwork was painted black using textured paint by Sherwin Williams.

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If the lobby’s not crowded, guests can spin records on the yellow vintage Realistic-brand LAB 440 turntable. They’ve got 150 vintage local and national vinyl albums.

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A display case in the breezeway connecting the main lobby with the guest rooms houses The Archives at the Verb,  curated from Bieber’s warehouse of thousands of pop-culture memorabilia.

The Verb Boston Boutique Hotel Stairwell

Original brick walls were painted vibrant hues and treated to music-related stenciled sayings. Perforated steel railings custom-fabricated by MIW Co. Ipanema Multi-Bloom Pendant Lamp by Jonathan Adler.

The Verb Boston Boutique Hotel Stairwell

“If the music is too loud, you’re too old.”

The Verb Boston Boutique Hotel Stairwell

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Photographs of numbers from Fenway park were pulled together to form the room numbers on hotel room doors.

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Illuminated signs on black walls in the hotel lobby.

The Verb Boston Boutique Hotel Guest Room

Guest rooms are clean and crisp with integrated wood veneer headboards. Elkus Manfredi Architects designed the mid-century modern inspired furnishings, which were manufactured by Artco.

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Framed Phoenix newspaper pages hang on the walls in each room.

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Mid-century dot pattern drapery and a shot of pink from the window film.

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Photo by Adrian Wilson

Like many boutique hotels, the contemporary bathrooms are simple but don’t skimp on amenities.
Tile by Dal-Tile.

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The desk in each hotel room is equipped with a typewriter purchased on eBay. The desk chair is an armless Setu side chair by Herman Miller.

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Best part: the hotel courtyard has a pool. The vibe is motor lodge, but really it’s like a hip resort, right downtown. Check out the green stands at Fenway in the background.

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Period-appropriate colors were carefully chosen.

The Verb Boston Boutique Hotel Sign

The Verb Hotel, 1271 Boylston Street, Boston

Photos by Marni Elyse Katz/StyleCarrot

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ARTmonday: Stefanie Klavens How We Live

Like many of the artists whose work I feature and own, I discovered photographer Stefanie Klavens at the School of Museum of Fine Arts sale in Boston. One year I was eyeing the photo of the two double beds (second photo below). It looks to me like a dreary motel room, though it’s titled Guest Room. I was attracted to the colors and the color fields, along with the general downtrodden, or at least severely outdated, decor. My husband very much didn’t want me to buy it. I didn’t.

That’s ok, because the following year I purchased the gold-hued living room photo of Klavens called Henry’s Paintings. I didn’t make the connection between them then, though now looking at them, it’s obvious these two interior photographs were taken by the same photographer. It’s hanging in a grouping of four photographs in our family room over our sofa, in a sort of compositional echo.

My favorite work of this mostly interior photography series that Klavens calls “How We Live,” is the first image here. To me, the pink and green living room interior really stands up. Swap out the art and preferably the shag rug (though a hip inhabitant could make it work) and you’re all set. Anna’s Parlor could work too, with its Jonathan Adler vibe.

Klavens describes the series as “the small-scale drama of everyday life.” She dubs them “portraits of people through the places they inhabit,” depicting “life captured as still life.” Klavens is inspired by “banal” and “mundane” scenes that hide clues about how people live. She says, “The images are empty and uninhabited, yet one senses a human presence just out of reach.”
In addition to this interior photography and similar exteriors of swimming pools, hotels, and the like, Klavins has photographed a series called “Theaters and Drive-Ins.”
Stefanie Klavens studied at Boston’s School of the Museum of Fine Arts, where she received a BFA and was awarded a Traveling Fellowship. Klavens has an upcoming exhibition this summer at the 555 Gallery in South Boston.

Stefanie Klavens Interior Photograph Pink & Green Living Room

Formal Room

Stefanie Klavens Interior Photograph Motel Room

Guest Room

Stefanie Klavens Interior Photograph Wood Paneled Parlour

Anna’s Parlor

Stefanie Klavens Interior Photograph Gold Living Room

Henry’s Paintings

Stefanie Klavens Interior Photograph Seventies Kitchenette

Kitchenette

Stefanie Klavens Interior Photographs Animal Print Bed

Blue Room

Stefanie Klavens Interior Photograph Pink Tiled Bathroom

Pink Tiles

ARTMonday: Rainbow Artworks

In honor of the United States Supreme Court ruling in favor of marriage equality, making same-sex marriage legal in all 50 states, here are artworks featuring rainbows, because #lovewins.

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Charlotte Chisnall    RainbowSociety6

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Zee Tucker    Taste the Rainbow  •  Society6

rainbow-art-landon-nordeman

Landon Nordeman    Nice Pants  •  20×200

ART-0580.1

Jan Sowarby    No.S124 Floating Rainbows    Serena & Lily

rainbow-art-adine-stix

Adine Stix    Harbor    Serena & Lily

rainbow-art-cissy-chen

Cissy Chen    Rainbow Dip  •  Saatchi Art

rainbow-art-bridget-fahy

Bridge Fahy    Jibboom  •  Saatchi Art

rainbow-art-carrie-marrill

Carrie Marill    Bird Power  • 20×200

rainbow-art-mel-bedggood

Mel Bedggood     Rainbow Baby  •  Saatchi Art

rainbow-art-timothy-blewitt

Timothy Blewitt    Memories Lie Over the Sea  •  Saatchi Art

rainbow-art-ivana-vajman-jackson

Ivana Vajman Jackson     Over the Rainbow  •  Saatchi Art

rainbow-art-julie-hansen

Julie Hansen    With the Waves    Serena & Lily

rainbow-art-jessica-snow

Jessica Snow    Color Stack Series #5  •  20×200

rainbow-art-lisa-congdon

Lisa Congdon    Lovebirds •  20×200

rainbow-art-serhii-bilyk

Serhii Bilyk    I-Horizon (Landscape with road, sun and rainbow)  •  Saatchi Art

rainbow-art-thea-altmann

Thea Altmann    Home Is Where My Heart Is  •  Saatchi Art

rainbow-art-katherine-blackburne

Katherine Blackburn    Rainbow Girls in Brooklyn  •  Saatchi Art

rainbow-art-kristofir-dean

Kristofir Dean    Silvery Sky  •  Saatchi Art

rainbow-art-stacey-meacham

Stacey Meacham    Salt Water Taffy    Minted

rainbow-art-matthew-shelley

Matthew Shelley     Rolodex 2    Uprise Art

rainbow-art-budi-kwan

Budi Kwan    Uphill Battle  Society6

rainbow-art-kristi-hoodjer

Kristi Hoodjer    Rainbow    Saatchi Art

rainbow-art-mariana-ionita

Mariana Ionita    Crossing the Other Sea    Saatchi Art

rainbow-art-mia-nelle-droschler

Mia-Nelle Droschler    Rainbow    Saatchi Art

rainbow-art-damien-hoar-de-galvan

Damian Hoar De Galvan

ARTmonday: 10 Variations On White

This past week I’ve been working intensely on an urban development / real estate piece for the Boston Globe, interviewing a number of Boston’s top real estate developers and architects. The other day I had the pleasure of talking with Sam Norod, a principal at Elkus Manfredi. Wrapping up business chatter, we connected on other things, including art. Norod’s daughter, Hilary Tait Norod, is an artist in her late 20s who recently moved back to the East Coast. Of course I clicked over to her website to have a look.

I was drawn to her white abstract paintings. The White Series began as a challenge—with the exception of the black outlines, all the colors on the canvas have been mixed with different ratios of white paint. The shapes in the compositions develop from through layering the paint and other materials on the canvas.

Norod explains her series of white abstract paintings with this statement: White is the color produced by the reflection, transmission or emission of all wavelengths of visible light without absorption. When light reflects off of a white surface the full spectrum of color is displayed, even when we may not see it. However, in the production of white paint there is no use of color.

Here is a roundup of mostly abstract artworks, all in variations of white, and all by artists represented by Boston art galleries.

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Hilary Taite Norod, The Black Swoosh
Galatea Fine Art

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Bill Fisher, Red Dots
Courtesy of Arden Gallery

julia-weiman-reverse-ii

Julia Weiman, Reverse II
Courtesy of Bromfield Gallery

wilfredo-chiesa-White1-(LaSerenissima)

Wilfredo Chiesa, White 1 (La Serenissima)
Courtesy of Alpha Gallery

janie-redman-immobility-series-spoon

Janice Redman, Immobility Series (Spoon)
Courtesy of Clark Gallery

cristina-pitsch-flora-of-fauna

Christina Pitsch, Flora of Fauna
Courtesy of Kingston Gallery

suzanne-ulrich-no-1459

Suzanne Ulrich, No. 1459
Courtesy of Barbara Krakow Gallery

danette-english-vase-series-#19

Danette English, Vase Series #19
Courtesy of Andrea Marquit Gallery

magda-biernat-adrift-22

Magda Biernat, Adrift #22
Courtesy of Robert Klein Gallery

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Bernard Haussmann,#2249 untitled (Darwin’s Coral)
Courtesy of Chase Young Gallery

Sunday Bouquet: Brown Bagging It

Flower Bouquet In Brown Paper Bag

The Bouqs

Arrange your flowers in an old glass jar, mayo container, what have you,
then slip a paper bag over it and tie with natural jute string.

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