Hey, there! Log in / Register

Homogenization of South Boston continues with plans to replace Dorchester Street market with five-story residential building

256 Dorchester St. rendering

Architect's rendering of 256 Dorchester St.

The owner of Bell's Market on Dorchester Street has submitted plans to the BPDA for a $13-million, five-story replacement building with 32 apartments and room for his market on the first floor.

In his filing with the BPDA, George Khoury says the building contains additional commercial space that could be used for "a possible diner/cafe."

The building would be topped with "eight modestly-sized roof decks for personal unit use" and would have 23 parking spaces in a below-ground garage.

Five of the units would be marketed as affordable; Khoury would also pay into a BPDA fund intended for purchase or development of additional affordable units.

256 Dorchester St. small-project review application (27M PDF).

Neighborhoods: 
Topics: 
Free tagging: 


Ad:


Like the job UHub is doing? Consider a contribution. Thanks!

Comments

The current building isn't exactly an architectural gem. More housing is needed everywhere.

up
Voting closed 0

It's not unreasonable to both have the 'build baby build' viewpoint while also wishing there was any attempt being made to produce a little more variation in the style of the buildings being erected.

Pointing out that this looks like umpteen other similar developments in the past 2-3 years doesn't mean it's not an improvement to a single story market.

up
Voting closed 0

that all these new modern buildings look like new modern buildings, so what is it exactly that you would like to see? As it is, whenever a developer proposes a slightly different looking building there is an outcry that it doesn't fit in and / or is ugly (e.g. https://www.elevatedboston.com/buildings/815-east-fifth-street/) When you drive around Southie now you see that many of the old triple deckers look exactly like the rest, which I assume is because they were built around the same time, which makes sense.

up
Voting closed 0

..it's because the appeal to Boston, is the traditional / colonial look, specifically brick - what you see in Beacon Hill, Back Bay, The North End....not what we are seeing here. Even remodeled & new structures in say the North End fit the traditional identity of the neighborhood. Not to mention a lot of these new buildings have no character & look cheaply made. For instance - virtually all of the buildings in the seaport look the same with a smidge of a difference distinguishing each of them - it looks like they're just slapping up a bunch of glass in the shape of a building.

up
Voting closed 0

First of all, this stretch of major thoroughfare has no character. Is it incumbent on this project to create it? It can't. But it is an overall improvement, and it provides necessary housing. It may not be cheap, or rent subsidized, but any housing that non-wealthy people can afford is good right now. And it it were made to look like Beacon Hill it would look more out of place than this does.

That said, Beacon Hill is not Colonial Architecture, even if it was begun in the Colonial Era. Beacon Hill is Federal Style, which looks quaint now but was considered unadorned in its era. It is actually reminiscent of Roman era style and was workmanlike in its time rather than Kerry pretentiousness. Notice how all the developed parcels that were possible were built with very narrow streets. That was economy of space, not quaintness. Today people (like you?) would bemoan the lack of open space and off street parking.

Maybe a simple workmanlike housing style is completely appropriate for the location and time. If the lack of costly adornment allows non-wealthy working people to afford to live there all the better. Actually, it is kind of a ode to the people who built Beacon Hill in their day.

The Back Bay is another story altogether.

up
Voting closed 0

Very labor intensive, which is a much bigger construction constraint than it was back in the 1800s.

What we really need are more prefab building projects to drop the cost of housing but of course this city is primarily run for the benefit of the construction unions so that won't ever fly. So we have expensive housing here to better pay for houses in NH and the outlying suburbs where the construction guys live.

up
Voting closed 0

: 105,000.

up
Voting closed 0

Wikipedia estimates the current SB population at a little over 33,000.

That is all.

up
Voting closed 0

People used to have a lot more children and pack them in a lot more closely. My father-in-law had 5 siblings in a 2-bedroom apartment.

up
Voting closed 0

While I'm not the biggest fan of all the boring, poorly-constructed condos going up all over Southie, this market and building are currently a total dump. Anything new would be an improvement.

Interesting though - some rough projects are literally right behind it. Will people fork over 600/700/800K to live there?? I only ask because I used to live right there, and I'm talking actual crime, noise, etc. I don't I'd pay that much to live there...

up
Voting closed 0

I live on Dorchester Street not far from Bells Market. You are correct, that whole building is begging for demo/reconstruction,. Added bonus that the two billboards on the roof will go as well, and we won't have two liquor stores directly across the street from each other.. Proximity to the large scale public housing development will impact sales to a degree, but I believe those units are scheduled for renovation akin to the work done on the units closer to Old Colony Ave. While those renovated units seem to be more of a traditional "home" in their look and scale, I do remember the construction of them took quite some time, which I am sure causes massive problems as tenants are displaced during demo and reconstruction.

up
Voting closed 0

not enough parking and like other developments with not enough parking, they will have a difficult time selling these.

up
Voting closed 0

so, the less parking built, the better.

up
Voting closed 0

There's a new (maybe a year old now) practically in JFK train stop on the Red Line which has a bunch of empty apartments they cannot rent because there are not enough parking spots. So please folks don't get sucked in to the developer's "transit oriented steps to public trsnsportation" bullshit.

up
Voting closed 0

Lower it enough, and people will happily move in there.

up
Voting closed 0

Exactly! Supply is finally starting to put a damper on demand - time for landlords and developers to realize they're beholden to the market just like the rest of us suckers who've been suffering endless rent increases for the last decade.

I wish the city would institute some kind of empty unit tax for big buildings, to discourage owners from holding places empty in the hopes of higher rents while writing off the losses. That would really bring a flood of ACTUALLY affordable units to the market as these "luxury" developers confront reality.

up
Voting closed 0

#sarcasm

up
Voting closed 0

God, I miss Sully's Pub

up
Voting closed 0

Oh wait, just a local trying to make a buck (or a few million of them). Listen, I'm all for it, I"m not gonna sell my place for less than what I can get. Just tired of the narrative - people living here their whole lives hating new people/change, until it's time to cash out - highest bidder wins! That's why we have $1M condos everywhere.

up
Voting closed 0

I wouldn't consider George a local.

up
Voting closed 0

He's not a local, you fool.

up
Voting closed 0

It's a blah, boring building.

So are most of the other buildings going up right now.

Housing is needed.

The current structure is awful and will not be missed.

Triple deckers have proven their durability, and compared to much current construction are Palladian in quality and design.

We can do better.

The BPDA needs to push, suggest, encourage developers to do something interesting. Perhaps some type of financial incentive? A design contest? We are in the midst of a building boom, everyone wants in, take advantage of it. Maybe establish a fee that would go toward street art, or art visible from the sidewalk. And trees. Boston has far too few street trees.

up
Voting closed 0

that row after row of triple deckers is homogenous.
Back around 1905 they were building them everywhere - where people up in arms back then?

up
Voting closed 0

It's ugly.

It looks like a cheap hotel.

The "balconies" look completely useless and a waste of money.

Build it anyway.

Think I would actually want some board to make them either explain or change? The roof. Random, scattered individual decks? No green roof, no solar panels? I don't understand it and when I do understand seems to be a massively wasted opportunity.

up
Voting closed 1

The architects didn't even bother to run a simple rendering engine on the model, they just skinned it in Sketchup and turned on sun.

I read more carefully - the roof decks are connected directly to the unit below. The included drafted plans don't show the roof access though, and they're still tiny with a lot of empty roof space.

Build it anyway.

up
Voting closed 0

Hello Everyone,

For those of you who haven't met me, my name is George Khoury and I am the operator of Bell's and the applicant for this project.
I would like to stress that this is only a first design. We are working to create a more visually appealing building that we hope will fit in better with the character of the neighborhood.
I have owned Bell's Market for over 20 years, and the community of South Boston has been so supportive to myself, my business, and my family. I hope that this new development serves as an improvement to this wonderful town.
If you have any questions, comments, criticisms, etc. please let me know. I am at Bell's every day.

Best,

George

up
Voting closed 0

George,

Thank you for stopping by! I (and I hope others) appreciate it when people engage in the community.

I think a lot of the ill-will is because this is a crappy rendering: sketch-up makes everything look fake and cheap. Of course it completely makes sense for a project of this size to not pay for a fully rendered version, especially at this stage.

However, I stand by my comments that

  1. The balconies are too small - either make them large enough to comfortably use, or nix them and save the expense
  2. The roof plan makes so sense and wastes a lot of space - larger decks, or solar panels or green roof inbetween the decks please
  3. There is no access shown from the top floor units to their roof decks - easy way to mitigate would be to make roof accessible to all tenants, but of course you lose to private deck amenity and have to have a more careful design.

I also appreciate that you have fewer than 1 parking spot per unit, and I sincerely hope that you rent the spots separately from the units, i.e. no bundling.

Thank you again.

up
Voting closed 0