Single-family home near Ashmont station to get rear addition with 13 new condos
The Zoning Board of Appeal today approved a developer's plans to renovate a single-family home at 9 Fuller St. in Dorchester and add a rear extension with four floors - to create a total of 14 condos.
Anthony Monahan's plans call for three of the units to be sold as affordable, his attorney, Ryan Spitz, told the board.
Four of the units will have one bedroom, four two bedrooms and six three bedrooms, Spitz said.
He said the building would have 12 parking spaces in a garage under the extension, adding that an existing, smaller garage would be torn down to make way for the extension.
The project needed zoning variances because the building would be closer to its side and rear lot lines and would be too tall and have too many floors under the lot's zoning. Also, the building wouldn't have a loading dock as normally required for a multi-family building of that size.
Spitz said the project would help Boston meet its 2030 housing goals and newer zoning efforts calling for denser development near transit stations and lines - such as the Ashmont T station about a block away.
Through an aide, City Councilor Brian Worrell (Dorchester) supported the proposal. A neighborhood liaison with the mayor's office said a few neighbors had expressed concern about the loss of privacy with the building's proposed decks. Nobody spoke in opposition at the hearing.
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Comments
Wow!
I mean I have no issue with it but can it really be considered an addition?
Historic one, yes
Ever notice how many buildings grew such additions during earlier housing crunches? Seems like a lot of older homes in the northeast grew large projections at some time or other, and those were designed as or became housing as needed. Some are hard to see because they are massed up behind what looks like a single family house and now vegetation has grown in, but you can see it on maps or satellite photos.
Sure, they may have been stables/barns/carriage houses that got converted, but this wasn't unusual in earlier times. This new design is just an echo.
Great book
There is a 1994 book on this: How Buildings Learn. Kinda fun.
Just some minor renovations
In my neighborhood there are at least three small ranch houses (maybe 1600 square feet) which were torn back to one bedroom and the foundation and then rebuilt to 5000 square feet. Apparently the permitting is faster and cheaper because this process is a renovation rather than a new build.
Permits
Yeah, the home reno shows talk about this all the time. It would have been cheaper to tear down and rebuild, but the permitting is a nightmare...
Loading dock?
Really? I can see loading docks in really big apartment buildings, but this looks too small to effectively rip out a few units just for moving van use...