The Boston Licensing Board this week hears a request from the owner of the failed Tonic bar in Forest Hills to sell his all-alcohol license to the owners of the Envoy Hotel, scheduled to open this summer across from the Barking Crab and the Moakley Courthouse in South Boston.
The hotel is planning two bars: A ground-level watering hole called the Outlook and a rooftop bar called the Lookout. Also planned: A 50-seat sidewalk patio.
Tonic opened in 2012, shut down not long after, briefly re-opened, then shut for good in 2013. Plans to convert it to an Italian restaurant or a Chinese restaurant went nowhere.
The board considers the proposed license sale on Wednesday in its eighth-floor hearing room in City Hall. Its hearings begin at 10 a.m.
Like the job UHub is doing? Consider a contribution. Thanks!
Ad:
Comments
Sorry to see
By cw in boston
Mon, 04/13/2015 - 9:48am
yet another all-alcohol license leaving a neighborhood for the big money in the Seaport area.
Important question
By SaraJ
Mon, 04/13/2015 - 10:36am
The light on Tonic's sign is still on! I am constantly baffled by this. How has NStar not cut them off? How has no one (the landlord?) not hit the switch? In combination with the blacked-out windows, it looks like a false storefront on an old movie set -- nothing behind it at all.
Yeah
By adamg
Mon, 04/13/2015 - 11:04am
And it's such a bright sign, too!
How has he hung on to this
By anon
Mon, 04/13/2015 - 8:47pm
How has he hung on to this license for so long??
How does a restaurant go out of business so quickly?!
By jonbowen
Tue, 04/14/2015 - 4:49am
It seems like these neighborhood restaurants last only short periods of time or they never open at all.
The failure of Tonic wasn't much of a mystery,
By MC Slim JB
Tue, 04/14/2015 - 9:36am
and I don't think it was typical of most neighborhood restaurant failures. (I reviewed it for Stuff Magazine shortly after it opened.) The owner spent large on a very modern, nightclub-like design (accompanied by awful, overloud house music), and got rid of a pretty good opening chef after a couple of months, purportedly because he wanted to cut food costs. What was left was too fancy to draw a neighborhood crowd, with food and drink that wasn't compelling enough for destination diners.
Add comment