Charlestown Rehearsal Studios
This location at 50 Terminal Street has been the long-time home of 95 music rehearsal studios in Charlestown--ultimately serving over 700 musicians, as groups often share rooms to share the cost.
The problem: The new property owners wanted to change the use from music rehearsal to self storage.
The advocacy: The #ARTSTAYSHERE Coalition helped the musicians organize, and with the City of Boston, the owners have agreed to keep the music rehearsal use. Some life safety upgrades are necessary to secure the occupancy permit, which are taking place currently.
Read testimony on behalf of preserving music rehearsal space in Boston.
Read the WBUR feature on Charlestown Rehearsal Studios here.
Read the WBUR feature on a City Council hearing on the loss of music rehearsal space in Boston.
How you can help: please sign the online petition by clicking here.
“an unlikely group of artists and activists known as the Art Stays Here Coalition has emerged to help combat displacement. The small, all-volunteer group is part of a broader effort that includes policy makers, developers, advocacy groups, and others to confront a problem that by some estimates has caused more than 2 million square feet of cultural space to vanish over the years, as gentrification emptied studios and other venues across Fort Point, the South End, the Fenway, Cambridge, and beyond.” August 5, 2023
“Advocacy requires specific skills including organizing, public speaking, writing/messaging, marketing/public relations, government relations, project management, event producing and fundraising. Through our experiences, we’ve seen the strongest arts advocacy is when artists come together and join with behind-the-scenes folks to create and execute a campaign. Often, advocating for creative space might be the first time some folks have ever advocated. There’s a lot to learn, a lot of strategy involved, and it takes a village.” July/August Issue 2023
“arts displacement is a symptom of an insecure cultural ecosystem — and to solve it, we must address it holistically. Each part of the ecosystem… — all stakeholders in our sector — must come together with one goal: to stop cultural displacement. We must preserve what we have, build more of what we need, and create protections for both. It’s cliche and true: it will take a village.” May/June Issue 2023
“more than two dozen individuals who signed up to speak at the public hearing. The room was filled with artists of various disciplines — from musicians to audio engineers, writers to dancers. The majority said they have been forced to move two or even three times as rehearsal spaces have been turned into housing and condominiums.The hearing lasted several hours and discussed a number of solutions.” March 8, 2023
“Last year, the A&BC acquired one of New England’s gems: Western Avenue Studios in Lowell, so it could stay as an affordable home to hundreds of artists across multiple disciplines. Coined “the creative soul of Lowell,” it hosts one of the biggest artist communities in the country: 250 workspaces, 50 live/workspaces, galleries and performance venues, shops and cafes.” March/April Issue 2023
“District 1 Councillor Gabriela Coletta joined with fellow District 9 Councillor Liz Breadon in sponsoring an order requesting a hearing before the council to discuss the loss of rehearsal space for musicians.” February 2, 2023
“Boston is home to many incredible artists like New Edition, Aerosmith, Oompa, and many of the upcoming artists who attend the Berklee College of Music. Our city loses many of these artists to Los Angeles and New York because of the lack of resources and support provided by the City of Boston.” January 25, 2023
“No one coming into Charlestown to go to their storage unit is going to serve any benefit to other businesses in Charlestown or the surrounding neighborhoods.” January 25, 2023