Observation Floor In addition to regular offices, the top 26th floor also accommodated two observation areas looking out over the Boston skyline. Access was free to the public and a Reception and Information Desk was staffed during normal business hours.
Back Bay Events Center It is also the home of the Back Bay Events Center: this two-part structure is the John Hancock Hall proper and the Dorothy Quincy Suite (a single room, capacity of approximately 900.) The Hall also contains a full
box office and an 1100-seat
auditorium. This is the annual site of the
Massachusetts High School Drama Guild One-Act Festival's State Finals.
Weather beacon It is topped by a
weather beacon with red and blue lights, which use a code to present the local weather forecast, using a popular rhyme as a
mnemonic: :::
Steady blue, clear view. :::
Flashing blue, clouds due. :::
Steady red, rain ahead. :::
Flashing red, snow instead. During
baseball season, flashing red means the
Boston Red Sox game has been called off on account of weather. The beacon was first lit on March 15, 1950 and was controlled using forecasts from a
meteorological agency located on the 26th floor. It was kept lit until 1973 when it was shut off to set an example during an
energy crisis which also temporarily shut off the famed
Citgo sign in
Kenmore Square. The beacon was re-lit in 1983 and has continued to display the weather forecast ever since. In October 2004, the beacon flashed red and blue to commemorate the
World Series victory of the
Boston Red Sox. This was the first time the color scheme changed since the beacon was lit in 1950. A new line was added to the poem accordingly: :::
Flashing Blue and Red, The Curse of the Bambino is dead! The beacon again flashed red and blue when the Red Sox won the
2007 World Series, as well as when they won the
2013 World Series. However, it did not flash red and blue the night they clinched the
2018 World Series. ==Gallery==