Historical Pechins Complex Burns to the ground.

sao123

Lifer
May 27, 2002
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Nearly everyone in the Tri-State Area has heard of the Pechins Grocery Story, along with its famous restaurant, known for its 19cent hamburgers and 5 cent coffee.
Though the company relocated last year, the original complex built in 1947 burnt down at 3pm on friday, cause ruled accidental.

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Old Pechin's burns


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Firefighters battle flames
John F. Brothers/Daily Courier

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Firefighters pour water on the flames
John F. Brothers/Tribune-Review News Service



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By Chuck Brittain
TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Saturday, June 10, 2006


Rege Lowman fondly remembered the late Sullivan F. "Sully" D'Amico, founder of Pechin Shopping Village, and the philosophy that turned a modest Fayette County family store into an enterprise with sales in excess of $30 million annually that once was featured in the Wall Street Journal.
"He said he'd rather sell 25 one-cent items than one 25-cent item," Lowman said Friday. "It was his dream to help people."

Then, Lowman turned to watch as an intense fire reduced the former site of Pechin Shopping Village to ash within a few hours. He turned back, paused, and added, "It was a philosophy that made him rich."

Lowman, of Dunbar Township, who has worked more than 30 years as a security guard for Pechin Shopping Village in Dunbar, stood within 75 yards of the abandoned shopping center as firefighters from 20 companies battled a stubborn and intense blaze that sent billows of smoke hundreds of feet in the air.





No one was injured in the fire that started around 3 p.m. By 5 p.m., flames raged through the structure, devouring everything as it moved more than 100 yards from the point of origin.

Most of the center has been closed since last summer, when Donald D'Amico Jr., company president and CEO and grandson of the founder, relocated the stores to Laurel Mall under the name Pechin Super Foods, just a few miles from the original shopping village that featured prices so low that word-of-mouth advertising anchored a reputation for rock bottom prices.

Although the facility ceased to be the hub of the business, dozens of locals lined the streets bordering the store complex to watch as the flames spread.

Workers in a warehouse area of the structure were inside at the time and rumors were swirling about the possible cause, but an official report is pending investigation by a state police fire marshal. Witnesses said all workers got out safely and there were no reports of any injuries to firefighters.

Tankers from several different companies ferried water from Braddock, about three miles away, to help battle flames that were being swept away by gusting winds. Power to some nearby residences was lost when several transformers were destroyed.

An occasional pop could be heard as flames reached propane tanks stored in the facility. Firemen prevented the fire from spreading to a concrete block building that housed several vintage automobiles.

Burning tarpaper on the roof yielded thick, black smoke. The fire grew so intense cinder block walls of the former drug and tobacco outlet collapsed. Several tractor trailers near the warehouse also burned.

Firemen doused a two-story house across the road from the fire as a preventive measure. The building houses Rendu Services, a community service organization run by Catholic sisters that provides health screenings and educational programs and hosts a monthly food pantry. It is where the Pechin empire was born nearly 60 years ago.

D'Amico Jr. was at the scene but unavailable for comment.

The original shopping village featured numerous businesses, but it was the food store that served as the anchor for Pechin in Dunbar, a hamlet of about 1,400 people. Customers negotiated through the store that was built over Gist Run Creek, which made winter shopping brisk in the 50,000-square-foot facility.

Other businesses included a beer distributor, sporting goods store, warehouse, drug and tobacco outlet and a restaurant that featured full dinners for under a dollar.

Sullivan D'Amico once joked that Dunbar was "the second-worst location in the world. I'm sure there's one somewhere that's worse than this, but I don't know where it is."

"I was about 12 when I worked there," said John Tristani, of Dunbar Township. "Just about everybody (from around here) worked there at some point."

Rick Adobato, Fayette EMS director of operations, said that no workers or firefighters were injured. American Ambulance also was at the scene.

Jerry Long, a scrap contractor from Ohio, was working with a crew in the far north section of the shopping village when the fire began. They have been on site since May 16. "We bought the counters from the grocery store. We buy scrap metals, copper, iron, coolers. We had almost everything out of the burning area two weeks ago. We've been working up top."

When Long and his workers came out of the north building, "we saw a lot of smoke and high flames out here."

D'Amico Jr. is planning on opening a restaurant at Laurel Mall called Pechin Firehouse Cafe to honor his grandfather's love of fire trucks.

Sullivan D'Amico opened the grocery store in 1947. The Pechin cafeteria was famous for its nickel cups of coffee and its 19-cent hamburgers. Senior citizens ate for free on Mondays.

Sullivan D'Amico died in February 2005 at 87.



Chuck Brittain can be reached at cbrittain@tribweb.com or 724-834-1151.

Pechin owner says blaze will be ruled 'accidental'


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By A.J. Panian
TRIBUNE REVIEW
Sunday, June 11, 2006


An acrid cloud of gray smoke hung over Dunbar Township Saturday after a five-alarm fire the day before reduced the former site of Pechin Shopping Village to ashes.
Large pits of fire smoldered throughout the charred remains of the 59-year-old Fayette County complex, considered an heirloom to the family of Pechin company President and CEO Donald D'Amico.

Firemen were summoned to the site again yesterday at 5:28 p.m. as the fire rekindled.

"The family is devastated; (the building) took 59 years to build and three hours to burn down," said Ted Phillippi, D'Amico's brother-in-law and manager of the relocated Pechin Super Foods in Laurel Mall on Route 119.





Trooper William Large, a state police fire marshal in Uniontown, indicated the fire was caused by an accident, D'Amico said.

"Basically, he came in this morning around 10 a.m. and looked at the place and said it was purely accidental, and that's the way he was going to finalize the ruling," D'Amico said.

Large could not be reached for comment yesterday.

Cars clogged nearby Ferguson Road as people arrived at an overlook to inspect the damage. Neighbors like B.F. Bigley, 87, wanted nothing to do with the smoky setting.

"I like to sit on my front porch or back porch, but I refuse to leave the house as long as that fire is still burning," Bigley said.

Phillippi said initial reports indicate the first fire was accidentally ignited around 3 p.m. Friday as an Ohio salvage crew worked in the northern end of the complex.

"There was some work going on, and there was a spark from somewhere and, from what the workers told us, it spread so fast that they had no time to put it out," Phillippi said. "Most of the machinery was out of the building, not everything, there was a pizza oven that was burnt up."

The smoldering fires are being fed by multiple layers of rolled tar paper and asphalt shingles that had covered the tin roof, according to Dunbar Volunteer Fire Department officials.

Department officials said crews will wait to completely snuff the flaming rubble until it can be separated into more manageable piles by bulldozers. The cost of such a move and who will pay for it has not been determined, so the department will wait for further direction, they said.

D'Amico and Phillippi would not speculate on a damage estimate.



A.J. Panian can be reached at apanian@tribweb.com.
 

kranky

Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
21,014
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I saw that got a lot of press in the papers and I was surprised I had never heard of the place. Apparently it was well known though.