Sign up for the Today newsletter
Get everything you need to know to start your day, delivered right to your inbox every morning.
The sale of a $600,000 liquor license from a shuttered Downtown Crossing restaurant to the developer of a 17-story high-rise in the Seaport district was approved by Boston officials last week.
The license purchase continues a post-pandemic trend of the restaurant and bar business shifting from Downtown, once bustling with workers, to surrounding neighborhoods such as the Seaport, home to several biotech companies with employees that must work on-site due to the nature of the business.
John Hynes IV, lead on the $600-million 10 World Trade commercial development project for Boston Global Investors and a company vice president, was given the go-ahead to buy the closed Silvertone Bar & Grill’s license on Thursday by the Boston Licensing Board, his attorney said.
For now, Hynes will be the restaurant manager for the $3-million, three-story section of the planned 17-floor life sciences office and lab building.
“[Hynes] has talked to several well-known Boston and Boston-area restaurant operators to come in and operate the premises,” Stephen Miller, the licensing attorney on the project, told MassLive. “It’ll be much easier for him to work with them with a license committed to the premises.”
The 10 World Trade Center Project in the Seaport neighborhood is expected to be completed by the end of the year. Photo by Irene Rotondo(Irene Rotondo/MassLive)
Hynes, who could not be reached for comment, has 12 years of experience as a bartender and waiter, Miller said. He also meets other requirements, such as being a U.S. citizen living in the state and knowing Alcoholic Beverages Control Commission (ABCC) regulations.
Plans over the next couple of months include identifying a restaurant group and the approval process for a management agreement with the Licensing Board and ABCC, Miller said, adding Hynes would be removed as manager of record afterward.
The previous liquor license owner, Silvertone Bar & Grill on Bromfield Street in Downtown Crossing, closed at the start of summer after its owner, David Savoie, said the business never recovered from the economic impacts of the COVID pandemic.
“We’re below nine floors of offices with 0% occupancy. Our lunch and after-work crowd paid the bills,” Savoie, who owned the restaurant since 2016, told The Boston Globe in June.
At the time, he was unsure what would become of the space where Silvertone was located, and told the Globe, “Nobody is going to spend $600,000 on a liquor license” to open a restaurant or bar there.
The 10 World Trade Center Project on Aug. 7, 2024. Photo by Irene Rotondo(Irene Rotondo/MassLive)
Miller said the transfer of the liquor license from the Downtown Crossing to Seaport is indicative of how Boston’s restaurant business is shifting post-pandemic, as Downtown is no longer “vital.”
“The Downtown is not fully recovered from the pandemic,” he said.
Over the past few years, employees split their time between the office and working remotely, while others are now fully remote.
“Restaurant businesses in the downtown Financial District are struggling, and places are closing, so people that are looking for licenses — whether it’s for the Back Bay or Seaport — are finding opportunities with places that can’t sustain their overhead business in the downtown Financial District,” Miller said.
“It’s the facts of life, unfortunately, right now; hopefully, it’ll change over the next year or two years; if offices are back and the people are back, downtown will become vital again, but right now it’s not,” Miller said.
Construction for Hynes’ 10 World Trade Center project began at 401 Congress St. in March 2022 and is expected to be finished by the fourth quarter of 2024. The Massachusetts Port Authority awarded the development designation in 2018 to a joint venture of Hynes IV’s company, Boston Global Investors, as well as Bastion Companies, EDGE and Cogsville Capital Group.
The glassy structure is located at multiple crossroads, including the multi-story intersection of Congress Street and World Trade Center Avenue and the gap between the lower Seaport and Summer Street.
It’s also near the Interstate 90 off-ramp and walkways and plans call for a pedestrian bridge to another building called the “Triangle Parcel,” part of the project being built on an adjacent half-acre lot.
The 10 World Trade Center Project on Aug. 7, 2024. Photo by Irene Rotondo(Irene Rotondo/MassLive)
The architectural concept of the “landmark development” includes a seemingly upside-down design of increased floor sizes as it gets taller, and will have views of the harbor and city’s skyline.
“Dramatic archways” will encapsulate the lobby, which leads to its 555,250-square-foot interior. Floors three through 10 of the building will be devoted to life sciences and lab space, and floors 11 through 16 will be office space.
Additionally, two acres of sustained outdoor space will be on the property. Plans call for 10,250 square feet of retail and cultural space.
“By the time 10 World Trade is done, it’ll be unlike anything else in the market,” Hynes IV said in a statement on the project’s documentation website.
“This project has really seen it all. It’s been through the wringer, and it’s never sacrificed any of its integrity along the way. In fact, quite the opposite, we’ve doubled down at every opportunity to deliver something even better, than what we initially set out to build,” he said.
President Trump holds up an executive order to limit mail-in voting as Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick looks on in the White House’s Oval Office in March.
Alex Wong/Getty Images
hide caption
toggle caption
Alex Wong/Getty Images
President Trump’s executive order to limit voting by mail has hit a legal hurdle.
On Thursday, a Boston-based judge blocked parts of the order that, at least so far, has not directly affected mail-in voting for this year’s midterm primary elections.
The legal fight, however, is likely to continue. The order pushes the boundaries of Trump’s authority under the Constitution, which gives state legislatures and Congress — not the U.S. president — the power to set the rules for federal elections.
The Trump administration is expected to appeal the new ruling by U.S. District Judge Indira Talwani, a nominee of former President Barack Obama, as a separate appeal of an earlier ruling by another federal judge moves forward in a similar set of lawsuits based in Washington, D.C.

Among other directives, Trump’s order from March calls for the Department of Homeland Security and the U.S. Postal Service to create lists of adult U.S. citizens or eligible voters in each state. It also calls for USPS, which is independent of a president’s administration, to deliver mail-in ballots only to people on those lists.
In response, USPS has proposed using information from state election officials to create voter lists. Postmaster General David Steiner told lawmakers Wednesday that under the proposal, the Postal Service would not deliver the mail ballots of any states that refuse to turn over their absentee voter lists to the federal government.
For the D.C.-based cases, the judge found in late May that it was too early for an emergency ruling that would block directives that the Trump administration has yet to carry out. Democrats are appealing that judge’s ruling to the U.S. Appeals Court for the District of Columbia.
Editor’s note: USPS is a financial supporter of NPR.
Edited by Benjamin Swasey
Local News
A 13-year-old boy was flown to a Boston hospital after he was found unresponsive in a swimming pool at a home in Beverly on Wednesday afternoon, police said.
Police and firefighters were called to a home on Parramatta Road after bystanders pulled the boy from the pool, the Beverly Police Department wrote in a press release.
Bystanders administered CPR until first responders arrived, according to police. First responders continued CPR and other “life saving measures,” police said.
An ambulance took the boy to Beverly Hospital where he was stabilized. He was then taken by medical helicopter to a Boston hospital, police said.
The incident is currently being investigated by Beverly police, the department said.
Get everything you need to know to start your day, delivered right to your inbox every morning.
Get everything you need to know to start your day, delivered right to your inbox every morning.
A federal judge on Wednesday permanently barred President Donald Trump’s administration from implementing most of his first executive order on elections, part of which sought to require people to show documentary proof of citizenship when they register to vote.
The ruling by U.S. District Court Judge Denise Casper in Boston effectively converts a preliminary injunction she issued a year ago, in which she temporarily blocked many of Trump’s efforts to overhaul elections, into a permanent ban.
Casper rejected the administration’s argument that the lawsuit to block the changes brought by Democratic state attorneys general was premature because the rules had yet to be implemented. Instead, she agreed that the Constitution gives states and Congress the authority to regulate elections, and that Trump’s requirements violated the separation of powers.
The Constitution “does not grant the President any specific powers over elections,” she wrote.
Among other proposed changes, Trump’s order would have required people to provide documentary proof of citizenship when registering to vote, prevented mail ballots from being counted if they arrive after Election Day, even if they were postmarked by then, and punished states that failed to comply by withholding certain federal money.
It was the latest in a string of rulings against the elections executive order Trump signed just months after taking office for his second term. He has since signed another executive order on elections, seeking to create a national voter list and limit mail balloting. That directive also faces multiple legal challenges.
Last fall, a federal judge in Washington, D.C., overseeing a separate challenge to the first election executive order by civil rights and Democratic Party-aligned groups blocked the government from taking steps to include the proof-of-citizenship requirement on the federal voter registration form. That judge later barred the Secretary of Defense from requiring documentary proof of citizenship when military personnel register to vote or request ballots.
In an apparent nod to the difficulty of implementing a proof-of-citizen requirement by executive order, Trump is pushing legislation in the Republican-controlled Congress to create such a mandate. The SAVE America Act has passed the House but has stalled in the Senate, leading Trump to advocate for eliminating the filibuster that is blocking the legislation.
On Wednesday, he abruptly cancelled the expected signing of a bipartisan housing bill, saying he won’t sign legislation until Congress passes his proof of citizenship requirement for voting.
Israel slams UN report as ‘political blood libel’ for alleging deliberate targeting of Palestinian children
Biden judge rejects Trump’s sanctuary cities lawsuit, says even a win wouldn’t solve DOJ’s problem
Latest COVID vaccine may have unexpected health benefit, study suggests
How to watch USA vs Turkey: Live stream the 2026 FIFA World Cup
Bionic hands are now teaching robots to feel
Snap CEO Evan Spiegel and Miranda Kerr help erase $550 million in medical debt for Californians
How Culver City-based Scopely built ‘Monopoly Go!’ into a mobile games juggernaut
Supreme Court rules Trump may end legal protection for Haitians and Syrians