40 Trinity Place will be a 31-story tower with a four-star hotel on the lower floors and luxury condominium units on the upper floors.
The 429,000 square foot building will rise 393 feet tall at the southeast corner of the intersection of Stuart Street and Trinity Place.
The new tower will have 154 hotel rooms, 146 residential units, a celebrity chef restaurant, a sky lobby and bar, a two-story public outdoor patio and high rise conference center, and ground floor retail and restaurant space.
Amenities for those who live in the residential portion will be located on the 17th and 18th floors and include concierge service, valet parking, a movie theater and a spa.
The highlight of the building will be a two-story sky lobby and bar, which will be set on the 15th floor.
The developers are planning on having a celebrity chef operate the restaurant and people from all over Boston will be able to come and view the city below from 150 feet in the sky.
The restaurant will also feature an outdoor patio, which when completed, will become the highest rooftop bar in the city.
40 Trinity will be built adjacent to the existing Boston Common Hotel, with an 11,300 square foot expansion for the hotel's University Club located on the building's third floor.
The ground floor of the building will open up retail space allowing for more business in the neighborhood.
A total of 17 on-site affordable units were previously proposed.
The look of the building has been designed to minimize visual impact on the Boston skyline.
The design is particularly sensitive to context as the building is within close proximity to Copley Square and adjacent to the iconic Hancock Tower. The building exterior is sculpturally distinctive, explicitly designed to distinguish it from the adjacent buildings.
Many architects have praised its sculpture-like design.
According to the architectural team that designed the building, it was “explicitly designed to distinguish itself from adjacent buildings” nearby. They also pointed out that “shadow and wind impacts on the surrounding area were carefully considered”.
40 Trinity will have a boutique and elegant feel unlike some of the larger buildings going up around Boston which consist of 200 or more units such as Millennium Tower, the New Four Seasons and Pier 4.
The hotel portion of the tower is being designed by Stonehill Taylor Architects of New York City.
40 Trinity is set to break ground in late spring and will be built by Suffolk Construction. The project will create approximately 700 construction jobs as well as approximately 350 permanent jobs.
The building is designed to meet LEED Silver certification, incorporating a number of sustainable design features to preserve and protect the local environment.
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