When you set yourself up to build-or restore-something in a city as old as Savannah, the chances are pretty good that you will run into road blocks.
Some of those obstacles are easier to overcome than others, but the bottom line is you will always be challenged. It is just the nature of the beast in such a historic locale. Something about blessings and curses, right?
I remember a little over a decade ago when I was beginning a renovation on my own home, which was built in 1890. Once you start the work, any experienced contractor will tell you โthere ainโt no tellinโโ what you are going to find inside of these walls. You just have to be prepared to do the work.
It would be easy to point a finger and say such shenanigans are a downtown Savannah problem. But they are most certainly not.
Thatโs the ongoing story right now at Despositoโs Seafood in Thunderbolt. A legendary restaurant and watering hole that will return to business later this year.
For all of the shiny new pennies that pop up quarterly in Savannah these days, this one will be the most anticipated. If you look at it from a purely local point of view, of course.
For those who arenโt familiar with Despositoโs, for decades it was a Savannah institution. Long before social media came to existence and made everything accessible and available, Despositoโs was packing them in down there underneath the Thunderbolt bridge just off of Highway 80.
On Sundays, it was race day. As in NASCAR.
The bar was full of patrons watching the race on what Iโm sure was a tiny television with rabbit ears. There may or may not have been a wager or two going on.
Despositoโs sponsored local racers too. Some of the memorabilia hung on the walls for years. Some of it has been set aside and will return to display.
The same goes for the circa early 70s beer bottles. They found a ton of them underground during the planning stages for the rebuild. Theyโll be cleaned up and put out as well.
The menu was tiny. Steamed shrimp, deviled crab, some sandwiches, chips. There was nothing over the top. It was truly a low maintenance, no frills joint. Thatโs what everyone loved about it. They were famous for not offering tartar sauce.
A couple of years ago, it was sold. It was sold by the man who practically grew up in Despositoโs tiny kitchen. His mother ran the place. Eventually he ran the kitchen. He knows the history. He witnessed the attraction. We told his story here last year.
The young lady now running the show is Michelle Cooley. She also knows this history and wanted to restore it. The original plan was to clean it up, bring it up to modern standards here and there and bring back Savannahโs long-lost friend.
Then they started peeling away the layers. The blemishes began to show on this nearly 100 year old building. The damage not visible to the naked eye needed to be repaired.
โWe had no choice really but to address it head-on.โ she says, referring to the amount of restoration that needed to be done before there could be any real talk of expansion.
New septic tanks are being installed. Handicapped accessible restrooms needed to be added. The plumbing was a mess.
โWe couldnโt flush a toilet without it affecting water pressure over here in the kitchen.โ Michelle says.
The renovations currently underway at Despositoโs are far more thorough than anyone involved in this project could have anticipated. The kitchen is getting new ventilation and will be almost 4 times the size of what it was. Although, thatโs not saying a lot. The former kitchen looked like my kitchen in my college apartment. Still, this new one is huge. It had to be to handle the volume they are expecting.
There is an outdoor deck being built. It will be covered. There will be a 25 seat bar that will dominate that outdoor space. The Thunderbolt boat ramp about 200 feet away. Full menu available there, of course. Parking lots are being added and expanded as well.
Back inside there will be a waiting area for seating. Next to that and near the front door, a take-out window. Just outside of that will be several picnic tables for anyone looking for a quick hit and run seafood lunch or dinner.
The new Despositoโs is going to be large. Capacity will hover around double what it was.
Thunderbolt has approved a huge neon sign that will face the bridge. Iโd been told 6 foot high letters. DESPOSITOโS
Youโll know it when you see it.
Unfortunately for some of the purists, the new Despositoโs wonโt too closely resemble the old one. At least not once you get inside. That has been a sticking point that Michelle has been reminded of regularly on social media.
โNo one wants any of it to be different.โ she says. โWe are trying really hard to keep as much of this in place as we can.โ
Itโs obvious in speaking to her that she cares about the balance between what this was and what this will eventually be. She is also aware that there is no pleasing everyone. Especially on social media.
Theyโve shopped practically every seafood spot in Chatham County for a feel on pricing and portions. Iโve had enough conversations with Michelle to know thereโs almost an obsession with providing value. I canโt say for certain, but I really doubt you will find a $25 fried shrimp platter with a couple of hush puppies and a slice of lemon. Tourists will snap that up, but that isnโt the goal here.
Speaking of food, the menu is being developed as we speak. Some of the original back-in-the day recipes will remain, but there will be more. Much more.
Michelle tells me theyโve discussed local shrimp with as many people as they can to this point. You can expect to see soups made from scratch as well as salads.
Outside there will be live music and an area to for kids to run around or play cornhole while you are waiting for a table, although they havenโt figured out where they are going to put that yet.
The atmosphere described to me will be something along the lines of Hilton Head Islandโs Skull Creek Boathouse.
Paula Deenโs Whitemarsh Island restaurant comes to mind, maybe Tybee Islandโs Crab Shack.
I canโt speak to spaces for boats in the Summer, but I suspect this new Despositoโs is very quickly going to become a destination in this town.
Making the very old new again.
Look for them to open late Summer.
This article appears in Apr 13-19, 2022.




