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Dot Block, the large mixed-use community along Dorchester Avenue near Glover’s Corner, is set to welcome its first residential tenants in a couple of weeks. When they move in, they’ll be close neighbors of the two architects most responsible for the project’s design: Kevin Deabler and Eric Robinson. The college buddies-turned-business-partners own and manage RODE Architects,
The NHL Winter Classic, played on Monday before a sell-out crowd of some 39,000 at Fenway Park, ended in a 2-1 victory for the Boston Bruins over the Pittsburgh Penguins. But the event wasn’t just a thrill for ice hockey fans. Two days before, on New Year’s Eve, NHL officials and former Bruins goaltender Tuukka Rask visited the Boys and Girls Clubs of Dorchester (BGCD) to
Gov. Baker last week signed a $5.2 billion bill focused on repairs to state buildings that included $1 million for the Dorchester Fieldhouse project, a collaboration of two local nonprofits centered on a 75,000-square-foot youth facility on Columbia Point. The nonprofits, the Martin Richard Foundation and the Boys and Girls Clubs of Dorchester, received approval from the
Mayor Michelle Wu last week signed a pandemic aid package, funded through money from the federal government, while vetoing the portion that would have sent $5 million to a planned youth facility on Columbia Point. “Our federal recovery funds are a once-in-a-generation opportunity to move urgently on community needs and invest in making Boston a Green New Deal city,” Wu said in