Hey, there! Log in / Register

Dorchester Lower Mills to get pizza topped with condos

Rendering of proposed condo and pizza building

Rendering by Derek Rubinoff.

The Zoning Board of Appeal yesterday approved plans by the owners of Spukies N Pizza at 1159 Washington St. at Dorchester Avenue in Dorchester to replace their building and parking lot with a four-story, 14-unit condo building - with ground-floor space for them to resume making pizzas and subs once construction is finished.

Stavros and Theodora Retzos opened Spukies - named for a once common pointy-ended Boston sub roll - in 1997. Their proposal is meant to leave a legacy for their family, on a lot that is appropriately shaped like a slice of pizza, their attorney, Nicholas Zozula told the board.

The proposal calls for six residential parking spaces, a Washington Street curb cut of 12 feet, down from the current 22, and the planting of several street trees along both Washington Street and a private way that runs along one side of their property, he said.

He added that two of the units would be sold as affordable. The couple's architect, Derek Rubinoff, added that all 14 units would be handicap accessible.

The building would go next to an apartment building that would transform the site of the Metamorphosis convenience store.

The project required variances because the proposed building would not meet the lot's zoning for minimum number of parking spaces and "open space" for residents and was closer than allowed by zoning to a side boundary. Zozula said the project deserved variances because of the lot's unusual triangular shape and because of its slope.

The board approved the project unanimously, pending the signing of a formal agreement on the two affordable units and a design review by the Boston Planning Department.

View from another side:

View of proposed building looking towards the center of Lower Mills
Neighborhoods: 
Topics: 


Ad:


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

Comments

This plan is great because 130 years ago, there was a, wait for it, a 3 and 4 -story building on the site built into the grade of the hill.

up
Voting closed 32

John
I know you are an OG and you know a lot of things about Dorchester, but how the heck do you know that? And do you have details for us?

..From another old guy in Dot.

up
Voting closed 14

The Dorchester Historical Society has a great page which you can search through. There are great pics of Lower Mills.

Also, look up Anthony Sammarco's Baker Chocolate FB page. There are some good pics of the neighborhood in there.

Also, when I was a kid, the Lower Mills library had a lot of good books on Dot and Milton history.

Thanks for asking.

up
Voting closed 19

I was a frequent customer at Spukies and Pizza until the pandemic hit - it's right down the street from where I work, and the prices there were decent. I haven't been there since, but I figure they'll come back better than ever.

up
Voting closed 18

Love the idea, but, the lot next door (as noted with Metamorphosis) has been seemingly waiting for construction to start for years now.

up
Voting closed 8

I speculate, but I'd guess it's interest rates. Some projects around the city that had been paused are starting to pick back up (e.g. this one which recently went from two-year-old hole in the ground to an actual building core) now that the financing environment has started to loosen up a bit.

up
Voting closed 11

Wow a new building with real balconies. Not these "sliding-glass-door-that-opens-to-nothing" things that all these new buildings seem to have now. In 10 years all these are going to do is leak air in the winter and be troublesome. Just put in a large set of double hung windows and be done with it.

up
Voting closed 13

to more effectively moon people lining up for the Dot Day Parade

up
Voting closed 11

Real balconies are a way to meet the open space requirements for new buildings on a small lot.

up
Voting closed 13

.

up
Voting closed 6

That's so Boston.

up
Voting closed 8

Shouldn’t it be ‘spuckies’?… though the current spelling and assumed pronunciation is more appropriate from past experience.

up
Voting closed 5

I lived in Lower Mills for 37 years; left in 1995. I say with absolute certainty that Spukies was in existence prior to my leaving. Perhaps the 1997 dating is for the Retzos' ownership? Or for the current location?

up
Voting closed 13

I used to love going to Spukies when it was across the street next to Flynn's insurance. Counters were so high I had to step back to order. Then Pat's Pizza opened and I for the most part stopped going there. But back in the day I loved it

up
Voting closed 10

My (now) husband had a high school classmate from Weymouth who came from Dorchester and she used the term. I didn't know at the time that it was hyperlocal, not regional.

Must have been some spukies available for a long while as her crew moved out of Dot in the late 1960s.

up
Voting closed 9