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Designers of the newly opened Liberty Hotel in Boston kept the prison guard 
catwalks above the lobby. Used as a jail from 1848 to 1851, the building 
recently became a luxury hotel.

 Associated Press 
The Big House 
Liberty Hotel | Luxury makes itself at home in a creative partnership that 
turns a jail into a hotel 
December 2, 2007
BY DENISE LAVOIE Associated Press
The elegant iron-railing balconies were once catwalks where guards stood watch 
over the inmates to make sure they didn't try to break out. If you look 
closely, you can still see the outline of the holes from the iron bars on the 
windows.

That's just the point. 


» Click to enlarge image
 
A taxi arrives at the newly opened Liberty Hotel. Eighteen of the hotel's 298 
rooms are built in the original jail and feature the original brick walls. The 
remaining rooms are in a new 16-story tower. 
Associated Press 

» Click to enlarge image
 
A doorman stands guard over the entrance to the Liberty Hotel, a former Boston 
jail. 

Associated Press 

After a five-year, $150 million renovation, the old Charles Street jail is now 
a luxury hotel for guests who can afford to pay anywhere from $319 a night for 
the lowest-priced room to $5,500 for the presidential suite. The hotel, at the 
foot of Boston's stately Beacon Hill neighborhood, opened in September.

The hotel, at the foot of Boston's stately Beacon Hill neighborhood, opened in 
September.Architects took pains to preserve many features of the 156-year-old 
stone building and its history.

The old sally port, where guards once brought prisoners from paddy wagons to 
their cells, is being converted into the entrance to a new restaurant, Scampo, 
which is Italian for ''escape.''

In another restaurant, named Clink, diners can look through original bars from 
cell doors and windows as they order smoked lobster bisque or citrus poached 
prawns from waiters and waitresses wearing shirts with prison numbers. The 
hotel bar, Alibi, is built in the jail's former drunk tank.

Instead of con men, counterfeiters and cat burglars, the guests now include 
Mick Jagger, Annette Bening, Meg Ryan and Eva Mendes.

The old clientele included Boston Mayor James Michael Curley, who served time 
for fraud in 1904 after he took a civil service exam for a friend; Frank 
Abagnale Jr., a 1960s con artist played by Leonardo DiCaprio in the movie 
''Catch Me If You Can;'' a group of thieves who pulled off the Great Brinks 
Robbery in Boston in 1950, and a German U-boat captain who was captured in 1945 
and killed himself with shards from his sunglasses.

Boston also has a luxury hotel called Jurys in the former Boston police 
headquarters in fashionable Back Bay. The hotel bar is called Cuffs.

The transformation of the Charles Street Jail is stunning to some of those who 
spent time in the notorious lockup.

''It's a magnificent place,'' said Bill Baird, an activist locked up for 37 
days in 1967 for breaking a Massachusetts law prohibiting the distribution of 
contraceptives to unmarried people. His arrest led to a landmark 1972 Supreme 
Court decision legalizing birth control for unmarried people.

''How you could take something that was so horrible and turn it into something 
of tremendous beauty, I don't know,'' said Baird, who visited the new hotel in 
October, on the 40th anniversary of his conviction.

When the jail opened in 1851, it was hailed as an international model for 
prison architecture. Built in the shape of a cross, the granite jail had a 
90-foot-high central rotunda and four wings of cells. Large arched windows 
provided lots of natural light and good ventilation. Each of the 220 cells 
housed just one inmate.

But over the years, the jail fell into disrepair and became filthy, overcrowded 
and prone to riots.

Joseph Salvati, who spent 10 months in the jail in 1967 and 1968 after he was 
charged in a gangland slaying, said everything was covered with pigeon 
droppings.

''They had a crew every morning that would come down with hot water hoses and 
brushes to scrape it off the floor and seats,'' he said. ''You had to rush down 
for breakfast to get a seat that was clean.''

Salvati, who was exonerated after spending 30 years in various prisons, said he 
gets a kick out of seeing the jail turned into a luxury hotel. It is now ''very 
classy-looking,'' he said.

In the 1970s, the inmates sued over the squalid conditions. After spending a 
night at the jail to see things for himself, a federal judge in 1973 ordered 
the place closed. But it took until 1990 for a new jail to be built and the 
last inmates to be moved.

The property was bought by Massachusetts General Hospital, next door, which 
invited proposals for preserving the building's historical character.

Cambridge developer Richard Friedman said the architects tried to retain some 
original elements while not reminding people too much of its dark past.

''How do you transform that into a joyous place where people have fun and a 
good time?'' Friedman said. ''We tried to use a sense of humor.''

Charlene Swauger of Albuquerque, N.M., who stayed at the hotel for a long 
weekend in October, said the designers preserved elements of the old jail 
without crossing the line into bad taste.

''I thought it was very clever. I didn't discover any ghosts or anything,'' she 
said.

Eighteen of the hotel's 298 rooms are built in the original jail. Those rooms 
feature the original brick walls of the jail but also have high-definition TVs. 
The remaining rooms are in a new 16-story tower.

Max Stern, the chief lawyer for the inmates whose lawsuit led to the jail's 
closing, said some aspects of the project -- such as calling the restaurant 
Clink -- are too lighthearted.

''I thought they could have been a little more objective about what it really 
was like,'' he said.

AP


Big house 'guests'
Big House "guests" have included:

Boston Mayor James Michael Curley, who served time for fraud in 1904.

A German U-Boat captain captured in 1945. He killed himself here with shards 
from his sunglasses. 

The thieves who pulled off the Great Brinks Robbery in Boston in 1950. 

Frank Abagnale Jr., a 1960s con artist played by Leonardo DiCaprio in the 
movie, "Catch Me If You Can." 

Copyright 2007 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be 
published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.



  
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