
Museum outlines its plans to expand
Features include stage for children
By Geoff Edgers, Globe Staff | February 17, 2005
The Fan Pier is still in limbo, but the nearby Boston Children's Museum took its first step yesterday to expanding its Fort Point Channel home.
The museum, in a filing with the Boston Redevelopment Authority, announced its plan, which would create a new entrance and lobby, a traveling exhibition gallery, an improved lunchroom, and a new stage for music and theater performances.
The expansion would add 20,000 square feet to the museum, and portions of the existing 150,000-square-foot building would be renovated. Officials from the museum said they were not prepared to say when they expect to start construction or how much they intend to spend on the project.
But Vivien Li, executive director of the Boston Harbor Association, said museum officials told her last week that the plans would cost about $25 million.
"It's pretty modest," Li said. "This is a very realistic plan. It's doable, and it's great for kids and families."
The Fan Pier, an empty 21-acre site on the South Boston Waterfront, is key in the city's development plans, but two prospective buyers failed last year to conclude deals for the land.
With the announcement, the Children's Museum joins a group of cultural institutions that have either recently finished or launched building projects. Those include the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, which finished its expansion in 2003, and the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, which is in the midst of a $180 million project. The Institute of Contemporary Art has begun building its waterfront property on South Boston's Fan Pier, and in November the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum announced it had hired architect Renzo Piano to design a multi-story building on its Fenway grounds.
"These expansions are not taken up lightly," said Dan Hunter, executive director of the private, nonprofit Massachusetts Advocates for the Arts, Sciences and Humanities. "They are planned out, and they represent a demand."
From The Boston Globe



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