News & Events
From pop-ups to a permanent shop
Brick Street Bagels fans … your wish is about to come true!
Brick Street Bagels, which built a loyal following through its popular pop-ups in South Boston, will have a permanent location in the neighborhood.
Owner Jordan Renouf will open Brick Street in a shop space owned by South Boston NDC at 371 W. Broadway that formerly housed Sweet Tooth Bakery. The opening date has yet to be determined as Jordan and his team are finishing construction.
South Boston NDC welcomes new board member
Christine McConville, a dedicated real estate professional with a background in journalism and nonprofit leadership, brings a wealth of experience and a deep commitment to community development in her new role as a member of the South Boston NDC Board of Directors.
ACTION ALERT
The developer of 776 Summer Street (the former Edison Plant) is seeking flexibility to relocate the required Inclusionary Development Policy (IDP) affordable housing units off-site or pay into the IDP fund, rather than keeping these units on-site as originally committed to the community.
From basement to blooms
Dannah Henderson was living in a basement apartment in Jamaicaway. Her unit was next to the washers and dryers and she started to see mold growing in her place.
Now Dannah lives in a South Boston NDC affordable unit , “I’m upstairs. I can breathe,” said Dannah, who had moved from Dorchester to Jamaicaway after the aunt she was living with passed away. “I have sunlight; I’m not in a basement!”
Giving back to his community
John Lurz, a South Boston resident and literature professor at Tufts University, is a committed monthly donor to South Boston NDC.
“It seems like a really easy way to feel like I'm contributing rather than just taking from my community and the things that it has to offer,” he said.
Mourning the loss of a community champion
South Boston lost a dear friend.
After a courageous fight, Karen Stanley, 62, lost her battle against pancreatic cancer. And we are devastated.
The news hasn’t really sunk in yet. In fact, she beat cancer once before many years ago, so we thought this was just another fight for her to win. And fight she did.
Shortly before she passed, she said, “You can knock me down, but you can’t knock me out. Until they tell me differently, I’m still here.”
Karen, a lifelong South Boston girl (she never called it Southie), was a friend, a colleague, a true community legend … She was related to probably half of the neighborhood and was friends or acquaintances with the rest.
Because of Karen, South Boston has become the thriving neighborhood it is today.