
Longtime Stoneleigh and Rodgers Forge residents may remember the commercial building at York Road and Regester Avenue as the home of Purdum Pharmacy, a no-frills drug store where penny candy really only cost a penny. In recent years, it housed a dry-cleaning establishment on the south end.
Starting next year it will be the home of Nana, a new dining spot from Carlos Raba, co-owner and chef of Clavel Taqueria and Mezcaleria in Remington. It will be Rabaโs first business in Baltimore County.
Raba said this venture does not change anything as far as his involvement with Clavel, where he will remain co-owner and chef. He said he saw an opportunity to start a new venture in Stoneleigh and wanted to pursue it. Clavel co-owner Lane Harlan is not part of this project.
โIโm doing a project by myself,โ he said. โThis has nothing to do with Clavel.โ
The Towson Flyer was first to report that Raba plans to transform the south end of the historic Stoneleigh Community Building at 6901 York Road, where the pharmacy was, into a taqueria modeled after the ones he remembers from growing up in Mexico.
In a phone interview with Baltimore Fishbowl, Raba said he plans to be open every day except Monday, serving breakfast tacos in the morning and tacos, quesadillas, rotisserie chicken, breaded and roasted cauliflower, mashed potatoes and other Mexican-inspired fare for dinner. โItโs a Mexican concept, a Mexican taqueria diner.โ
Raba said he lives with his family in Lake Walker, about five minutes south on York Road from Regester Avenue, and wanted to be part of Towsonโs energy and growth. He takes his kids bowling at Stoneleigh Lanes and shops for groceries in the area. He said his business will be an alternative to the food chains up and down the York Road corridor and that money spent at Nanaโs will stay in the community rather than go to out-of-town corporations such as Boston Market or Chipotle.
โI think itโs a great opportunity โฆ to bring a little bit of Baltimore to Towson, and Towson to Baltimore,โ he said.

Even though Nana isnโt connected to Clavel, Raba added, he hopes that people who like Clavel will like his new venture.
โYouโre reading a different book, but itโs the same author,โ he said. โYou should have the same feeling. Itโs Carlosโ food.โ
Raba said heโs aiming to complete renovations in time to open by next spring, assuming an oven and other equipment arrive in time, and heโs naming the business after his great-grandmother. In Mexico, he said, itโs traditional to call great-grandmothers Nana, and thatโs what he called his great grandmother. โIโm going with โฆ a name thatโs familiar,โ he said.
Raba, 38, co-founded Clavel, a highly-praised restaurant at 225 West 23rd Street, with Harlan in 2015. A Black belt in Brazilian jiu-jitsu, he also heads Guardian Baltimore in Remington, non-profit gym that offers Brazilian jiu-jitsu and yoga classes and trains kids aged 6 to 17 for free.
Raba said Nana will serve food to go or to eat on-site. He said he hopes to offer outdoor seating to supplement about 20 seats indoors. He said Nana will result in the creation of 20 to 30 jobs.
This is the latest in a series of improvements to properties near the intersection of York Road and Regester Avenue, a key crossroads for Stoneleigh, Rodgers Forge and Anneslie to the south.
Starbucks, The Charmery and Pure Raw Juice have all opened stores at or near the intersection, and Rosedale Federal Savings & Loan Association just renovated its branch at 6810 York Road. Businesses that have closed in recent years include Harry Littleโs, Steak & Egg and Uncle Wigglyโs deli and ice cream shop.
The Stoneleigh Community Building, also known as the Stoneleigh Shoppes Building, is a Baltimore County counterpart to the historic Roland Park Shopping Center on Roland Avenue in Baltimore City, designed for multiple retail tenants. The pharmacy space alone was once two tenants.
The two-story Tudor Revival-style structure dates from 1924 and has been designated a Baltimore County landmark. Itโs distinguished by a stone veneer on the first level and stucco with half timbering on the second level, which draws attention to the projecting gable bays above. It has a limited amount of off-street parking. Residents warn that parking will be a concern. Raba said he plans to explore the possibility of getting a liquor license for the business but knows that may be difficult because a church is nearby.
Raba said he has signed a lease for his space, including part of the buildingโs basement and three garages. Besides adding an oven and other kitchen equipment to an area that wasnโt previously used as a dining establishment, he plans to open up the large front and side windows that have been closed for years, restore original stonework and make other improvements that take advantage of the buildingโs original features. Heโs working with Maggie Ford of Price Modern and Ian Sokoloski of Design Evolution Architecture.
โIโm bringing the beauty of that building back, opening the windows, making sure we have the high ceilings, bringing it back to 1924 when it was built,โ he said. โItโs going to help the neighborhood and make that corner beautiful.โ
Because the building is a landmark, any new tenant must adhere to the countyโs preservation controls. But โwe can beautify it,โ Raba said. โWe can make sure it doesnโt look abandoned like it looks right now.โ
Inside, โI donโt want to spill the whole beans, but Iโm going with something that is minimalist and beautiful โ wood, beautiful stonework inside, making sure that we open the ceiling and have great light and use the colors I like. Minimalist but beautiful and warm.โ
Besides white, heโs introducing โcolors from my childhood,โ mostly in tilework and other details rather than on walls โ ochre, pink, gold, maize.
Raba said the project has been in the works for a couple of years. He said the current owner of the building brought it to his attention.
โItโs been a long conversation,โ he said. โI always liked the building and I was asking around who owns it. When the landlord bought the building, he knew that I had interest. Itโs a great building. Itโs a great community. So I was very interested.โ
The pharmacist at Purdum Pharmacy had his license suspended by the state of Maryland after he pled guilty to one count of felony Medicaid fraud in 2007. The pharmacy closed in 2008. Raba said the dry cleaner has moved to a smaller space within the building, freeing up the former pharmacy space on the end.
Now approaching its 100th anniversary, the building changed hands in 2019 when 6901 York Road LLC bought the property for $1.4 million. The developer behind the purchase is Jeremy Landsman of Reba Holdings Inc., which owns commercial properties in the 6800 block of York Road as well as Hampden; Beltsville; Olney; Tacoma Park; Arlington, Virginia, and Washington, D. C., its website states.
According to the Reba Holdings website, Landsman received a business degree from Towson University and has been in the real estate business since 2002. In Hampden, his holdings include buildings that house The Food Market; The Charmery; Paulie Geeโs, the Bluebird Cocktail Room and Wicked Sisters, among others. Reba is his German Shepherd.
The York Road project isnโt the first time Landsman has converted a pharmacy to a new use. The Charmery at 801 West 36th Street in Hampden also was created inside a former pharmacy.
Raba said heโs looking forward to opening.
โIโm all in on this project,โ he said. โOpening a spot like that is a commitment to the building and to the community where youโre doing it โฆ. Itโs very challenging but itโs exciting.โ
