575 Commonwealth Avenue
{{Use mdy dates|date=April 2025}}
{{Infobox building
| name = 575 Commonwealth Avenue
| former_names = Howard Johnson's Hotel, Fenway Commonwealth Motor Hotel
| image = 575 Commonwealth Ave.jpeg
| location = 575 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, MA
| owner = Boston University
| floor_count = 7
| opened_date = 1963
| parking = Underground garage
| alternate_names = HoJo
}}
{{coord|42|20|58|N|71|5|55|W|type:landmark_region:US|display=title}}
575 Commonwealth Avenue is a dormitory at Boston University. Until 2001 the building was a Howard Johnson hotel owned by the university. It is located in Kenmore Square next to the Rafik B. Hariri Building, which houses the Questrom School of Business.
History
The building at 575 Commonwealth Avenue opened in November 1963 as the Fenway Commonwealth Motor Hotel. It contained 150 rooms and a 135-car garage. It was the third hotel in the Commonwealth Motor Hotel chain.{{cite news|last=Kneeland|first=Paul F.|title=His Friends Wanted a New Hotel, So He Built One|newspaper=The Boston Globe|date=January 13, 1963}} In 1975 the hotel became a Howard Johnson's.
The seventh floor was home to a cocktail lounge. Originally known as the Cartoon Room, it later became a Top 40 club called the Up and Up Lounge. In 1983 it became a jazz club known as the Starlight Roof.{{cite news|last=Morse|first=Steve|title=Nightlife|newspaper=The Boston Globe|date=October 27, 1983}} Among the artists to perform at the Starlight were Ruby Braff, Tanya Hart, Tal Farlow, Phil Wilson, Scott Hamilton, Guy Van Duser, Marian McPartland, and Chris Connor.{{cite news|last=Santosuosso|first=Ernie|title=Weekend|newspaper=The Boston Globe|date=May 4, 1984}}{{cite news|last=Dougherty|first=Robin C.|title=9 Days a Week|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=AGwtAAAAIBAJ&sjid=WIoFAAAAIBAJ&pg=2687,4631815&dq|newspaper=The Boston Phoenix|date=November 11, 1986}} The lounge's final incarnation was as a nightclub known as the Lava Bar.{{cite news|last=Kaufman|first=Hayley|title=Boogieing Along the Edge|newspaper=The Boston Globe|date=February 17, 2000}}
On March 6, 1981, a four alarm fire broke out in the hotel. Twenty guests had to be rescued from balconies and window ledges.{{cite news|title=20 guests saved from fire at Kenmore Square motel|newspaper=The Boston Globe|date=March 7, 1981|author=John E. Yang|author2=John Dillion}} Six guests and two firefighters were treated for smoke inhalation.{{cite news|last=Cushman|first=Elaine|title=Hotel's 6th-floor ledge was a refuge in fire|newspaper=The Boston Globe|date=March 8, 1981}}
In 1987, the hotel's swimming pool was closed from August 19 to September 23 for sanitary violations.{{cite news|title=Restaurants Closed for Sanitary Violations|newspaper=The Boston Globe|date=November 16, 1987}}
In 1992, Boston University purchased the hotel for $7.5 Million. At the time of the purchase, the university stated that the building would most likely be renovated to serve as a conference center, possibly in conjunction with the Boston University School of Management that was going to be built next door.{{cite news|last=Flint|first=Anthony|title=BU Acquires Hotel for $7.5 Million|newspaper=The Boston Globe|date=November 10, 1992}} After the purchase, BU leased the building to Howard Johnson Co. BU rented out for its students at the hotel when there was a shortage of student housing.{{cite news|last=Beam|first=Alex|title=Puff the magic Imus|newspaper=The Boston Globe|date=October 7, 1994}}{{cite news|last=Dember|first=Alice|title=Region's dorms are overflowing|newspaper=The Boston Globe|date=September 13, 1996}}
On February 5, 1994, about 200 people were evacuated from the hotel after a fire broke out on the top floor of the building. Five people were treated for smoke inhalation.{{cite news|last=O'Shea|first=Arthur|title=Five treated, 200 evacuated in hotel fire|newspaper=The Boston Globe|date=February 6, 1994}}
In August 2001, the Boston Redevelopment Authority approved the university's plan to convert the hotel into a dormitory.{{cite news|last=Rosenwald|first=Michael|title=A Grand Idea Gets Done|newspaper=The Boston Globe|date=November 3, 2001}}
Layout
The dorm is coeducational, and houses 456 residents on six residential floors. It lacks a dining facility; residents must eat at one of the three on-campus dining locations (the nearest being 100 Bay State Road). However, residents do enjoy a number of amenities that are unusual for dormitory style housing, owing to the building's previous life as a hotel. These include air conditioning and private bathrooms for each room.
Most rooms are triple occupancy, with very few double and single occupancy rooms also found throughout.
Nicknames
While the University officially refers to the facility as "575 Commonwealth Avenue," students sometimes shorten this to simply "575," but almost exclusively call it "HoJo," in reference to its previous use.
Parking
The building is constructed over a dual-tiered parking garage. Under normal circumstances these parking areas are reserved for staff members with the proper permit. The university also sells spaces during Red Sox games at nearby Fenway Park.
Hostel use
During the summer months 575 is leased by Hostelling International as a destination for tourism. It is known as the Fenway Summer Hostel.{{cite web |url=http://www.bostonhostel.org/fenway.shtml |title=Fenway Summer Hostel |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060715030942/http://www.bostonhostel.org/fenway.shtml |archive-date=2006-07-15 |access-date=14 May 2013}}
References
{{reflist|2}}
{{Boston University Housing System}}
{{Boston University}}
Category:Buildings at Boston University