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JOHN
HANCOCK TOWER
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Trinity Place at St. James Ave.
(617)247-1977
Boston's skyline is readily recognizable from any number of
angles and with good cause. It represents an artistic
compilation of structural shapes and sizes that combine to
create an urban landscape second to none. Standing out
among - and definitely above - the surrounding structures, the
Back Bay's John Hancock Tower is Boston's tallest landmark
beating out the nearby Prudential Tower by several floors.
However, the John Hancock Tower stands out for more than its
height. At 62-stories high, the mirrored rhomboid earned a place
in the hearts of longtime Bostonians when the proud structure -
criticized at first for being too flamboyant - began shedding
window-sized glass panes like huge crystalline tears falling
from the face of a gentle giant. The cause of the falling window
panes was traced and remedied, but not until after Bostonians
had grown used to signs warning them to watch out for falling
glass - tidbits of which likely remain stored in shoeboxes and
kitchen drawers throughout the region. The result of that
unseemly introduction? Locals came to embrace the building once
criticized for being too tall, too modern, too glitzy,
too...well...too...and came to see it as one of their own -
defending its imperfections while heralding its height,
strength, poise, and to-die-for view from its 60th floor
observatory.
Designed by renowned architect I.M. Pei, the John Hancock Tower
was completed in 1976 to create additional office space for the
John Hancock Life Insurance Co. which already occupied two
buildings - the Berkeley Building on Berkeley Street and the
Clarendon Building on Clarendon Street - across the street from
the site of the John Hancock Tower. Visitors reach the tower's
60th floor observatory through a side entrance on St. James Ave.
across the street from Trinity Church and Copley Place where
they purchase tickets and board an express elevator that whisks
them to Boston's highest lookout point. On a clear day, visitors
will likely be able to pick out Provincetown at the end of Cape
Cod on the eastern horizon, New Hampshire's White Mountains to
the north, and Berkshire Hills in western Massachusetts to the
west.
Pay-per-view telescopes
are posted at strategic points around the perimeter of the
observatory. And while the view is spectacular, so is the
audio-visual presentation that describes how Back Bay came to be
(it was created by filling marshlands with gravel in the early
1900s) pinpointing where the Hancock Tower would stand in water
had that project not created the Back Bay neighborhood.
Hours
Monday to Saturday 9 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Sunday noon to 10 p.m.
Admission/Fees
Adults: $4.25
Children: $3.25
Seniors: $3.25
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