Wellesley emergency officials rush to Kimlo Road house fire

A 3-alarm house fire on Kimlo Road in Wellesley had police and firefighters scrambling this morning. All those livng in the house escaped unharmed. The fire was brought under control, though Rte. 9 east and other area roads were hit with traffic delays. The cause of the fire is under investigation according to WHDH-TV, which has video coverage. WBZ-TV reported that two firefighters were being treated for heat exhaustion.

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Wellesley High School ranked #4 by Boston Magazine

Boston Magazine has ranked Wellesley High School as the fourth best public high school in Massachusetts based on factors such as MCAS scores, SAT scores, per-pupil spending, student-to-teacher ratio, graduation rate, percent of students who continue into college as well as amount of sports teams and clubs.

boston magazine cover for september

Wellesley High placed 7th last year. Weston High topped the magazine’s list, as it did last year.

The complete rankings and related content is in the September issue of Boston Magazine but is not online yet.



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Noted writers flocking to Wellesley College this fall

Wellesley College this fall invites 5 accomplished writers to take part in its Newhouse Center for the Humanties Distinguished Writers Series. All events are free and open to the public.

Peter Carey Tuesday, Sept. 28 | 4:30 PM | Newhouse Center for the Humanities – 237 Green Hall

Two of his 11 novels have won the Booker Prize Oscar and Lucinda in 1988 and True History of the Kelley Gang in 2001.His most recent novel, Parrot and Olivierin America, an improvisation on the life of Alexis de Tocqueville, author of Democracy in America, was published in 2010.

Meena Alexander and Tomaž Šalamun Tuesday, Oct. 12 | 4:30 PM | Newhouse Center for the Humanities – 237 Green Hall
Alexander has published six volumes of poetry including Illiterate Heart, which won the PEN Open Book Award. She is the editor of Indian Love Poems and author of the volume of poems and short prose pieces, The Shock of Arrival: Reflections on Postcolonial Experience. Poetics of Dislocation appeared in 2009 in the University of Michigan’s Poets on Poetry Series. Her prose includes two novels,a memoir and two academic studies on early English Romanticism.
Considered Slovenia’s greatest living poet, Šalamun was born in the city of Zagreb in 1941 and is considered one of the foremost figures of the Eastern European avant-garde. His books  include The Book for My Brother, Poker, Row, and Woods and Chalices. A new book of poetry, Blue Tower, translated by  Michael Biggins, will be published this year.

Russell Banks Tuesday, Oct. 26 | 4:30 PM | Newhouse Center for the Humanities – 237 Green Hall
His latest novel, The Reserve, was published in early 2008. His novels Afflictionand The Sweet Hereafter were adapted into feature films that received widespread critical acclaim.  Continental Drift and Cloudsplitter were finalists for the Pulitzer Prize; Afflictionand Cloudsplitter were finalists for the PEN/Faulkner Award.

Maryse Condé Tuesday, Nov. 9 | 4:30 PM | Newhouse Center for the Humanities – 237 Green Hall
Her literary honors include the Grand Prix Litteraire de la Femme (1986) for I, Tituba, Black Witch of Salem, the Prix Marguerite Yourcenar (1999) for Tales from the Heart, True Stories from my Childhood and the Prix Carbet de la Caraibe (1997) for Desirada.



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Wellesley man indicted in alleged medical equipment crime

The Denver Business Journal reports that a Wellesley man who once led medical laser maker Spectranetics of Colorado Springs has been indicted for alleged involvement in illegally importing unapproved medical gear.

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Tian Fu feeding frenzy

Save Tian Fu event, Wellesley MA

Tian Fu Restaurant, which is trying to stave off its shutting down this month as a result of a deal between Whole Foods and landowner Gravestar, is holding a rally Monday late afternoon/early evening (4:30-730pm) to raise awareness about its plight. Tian Fu would like to stay put at 446 Washington St. in Wellesley, or at the very least move into the vacated Rite Aid space.

We popped on the early side in since this is one of the few restaurants around where everyone in our family likes to eat.

The Save Tian Fu event featured a slew of free food and drinks and packed 50 or 60 people in within the first half hour, including a cadre of kids, a senatorial candidate talking up his hopes for compromise and some important looking guys in suits.  Owners Li Yu and John Chen were swarmed like a bride and groom on wedding day by supporters.  Cameramen from assorted media outlets (including WBZ) tripped over themselves taking pictures of people with food in their mouths.

Tian Fu, a supporter of the new Wellesley Chinese Language School and other community activities, has promised to keep fans posted via its Facebook page and website.

Tian Fu, Wellesley MA



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Wellesley Home Design Center closes

Wellesley Home Design CenterWellesley Home Design Center, at 555 Washington St., has shut down, its website is no more and a For Rent sign is in the window. The business opened in Wellesley last year.

Missed that in our recent survey of vacant commercial space in town.



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Babson art exhibit: MicroClimates

Babson College art exhibit, Alison Williams

What:    The Sorenson Center for the Arts at Babson College presents Microclimates: Mixed Media Artwork

Who:    Alison Williams, New Hampshire artist and 2009 Joan Mitchell Foundation Award Winner

When:    Exhibit: September 9-October 29, 2010
Hours: Monday – Thursday; 8:00 am-7:00 pm
Opening Reception: Thursday, September 9, 5:00-7:00 pm
Artist Talk: Thursday, September 23, 1:00-1:30 pm

Where:    Babson College, Hollister Gallery, Wellesley, Mass.

Info:    Contact Artist-in-Residence Danielle Krcmar, 781-239-5888

Alison Williams grew up in New Zealand, attended art school in Scotland, and currently has her studio and garden in New Hampshire.

At Babson, Williams will show paintings, altered photographs, and three of her glass houses. Made with re-used hardware and carefully fit together windows, these intimate art viewing spaces are sculptural artworks themselves. Influenced by her father’s greenhouses and Victorian Wardian Cases, Williams’ glass houses frame spaces where biological processes directly impact creative ones. The garden and its plants in their unwieldy wildness inspire and collaborate in the art-making. Canvases and photographs are buried and allowed to decay in order to later be unearthed and reworked. Paintings are made outside with rain altering the patterns and drying of the paint. Soaked flowers create delicately colored liquid pigments, while leaves, stems, and seeds are both stencils and collage materials layered into highly “unnatural” paint, stickers, and found materials.

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Wellesley College posts fall concert schedule

Lots of free music performances coming from Wellesley College’s Music Department this fall:

Zili Misik and the Cercie Miller Quartet Wednesday, Sept. 15 | 7:30 pm| Jewett Plaza
In conjunction with the opening of the Davis Museum’s fall exhibition Calculated Risks, Department of Music faculty Cercie Miller and Kyra Washington, bring their dynamic bands together on one stage. Both the Cercie Miller Quartet (CMQ) and Zili Misik are beloved contributors to Boston’s musical landscape, with unique sounds of their own. The pairing of CMQ’s mastery of the jazz canon with Zili’s blend of music that reconnects the sounds of Africa and African diasporic nations is a calculated risk bound to reap significant musical rewards.
Beacon BrassQuintet Wednesday, Oct. 6 | 12:30 pm| Jewett Auditorium
Hailed as “one of the nation’s finest chamber ensembles” by Bostonia magazine, Beacon Brass Quintet features performing faculty member Dana Russian.  In 1983, the Quintet became the first brass ensemble ever to win the prestigious Concert Artists Guild Award, and it has been performing in concert throughout the United States ever since.  Recently, the Quintet was featured in lecture-recitals with Boston Pops conductor Keith Lockhart. Noted for their expertise in a wide spectrum of music, their program at Wellesley will span five centuries.

“That Wants it Down”: Music that Defies Barriers – Faculty Concert Saturday, Oct.16 | 8:00 pm | Houghton Chapel The annual classical faculty concert brings Wellesley’s dynamic performing faculty from the studio and classroom to the stage and community. This year, they will present a program of music by polystylist composers, including Barber, Cage, Del Tredici, Hindemith, Schnittke and Shostakovich.  Faculty musicians include Eliko Akahori, piano; Marion Dry, contralto; David Russell, cello; Dana Russian, trumpet; Lois Shapiro, piano; Olga Talroze, piano; and Antoine van Dongen, violin.
Blue HeronRenaissance Choir Saturday,Nov. 6 | 8:00 pm | Houghton Chapel
Dubbed a“leading actor in the field of Renaissance music,” by Fanfare Magazine, the Boston-based Blue Heron Renaissance Choir (www.Blueheronchoir.org) is a vocal ensemble that combines commitment to vivid live performance with the study of original source materials and historical performance practice. The ensemble’s program is inspired by a new acquisition in the Wellesley College Music Library, a heart-shaped facsimile of the Le Chansonnier de Jean Montchenu, a book of 14th-century French chansons. The book will be displayed in the Multifaith Center following the evening’s program.
The Carey Concert: Pianist Charles Fisk Colloque Sentimentale: Chopin and Debussy in Paris Sunday, Nov. 14 | 7:00 pm |Jewett Auditorium Pianist Charles Fisk, Phyllis Henderson Carey Professor of Music, will be joined by faculty members contralto Marion Dry and cellist David Russell in a program including Debussy’s Fetes galantes II, Trois Poèmes de Mallarmé, Pour le Piano and Images, and Chopin’s cello sonata, Polonaise in F# minor, Op.44, Mazurka in C# minor Op.50/3, Berceuse in Db, Op.57 and Barcarolle in F#, Op.60. A faculty member since 1973, Fisk was the highest-ranking American in the 1980 J.S. Bach International Competition in Washington, D.C. His Carey Concert performances are a beloved annual tradition.
Paula Zeitlin Quintet Wednesday, Nov. 17 | 12:30 pm| Jewett Auditorium
Paula Zeitlin Quintet (PZQ), featuring Wellesley performing faculty member and jazz violinist Paula Zeitlin, guitarist Steve Thomas, bassist Maggie Rizzi, pianist Bob Ponte and drummer Greg Conroy, is a veteran ensemble in the Boston music scene. Their performance at Wellesley will showcase PZQ’s unique sound, influenced by Dawg and gypsy jazz, samba and Afro-Cuban jazz, Bach and bluegrass. For more, go to www.paulazeitlin.com.

Boston Modern Orchestra Project Luminous Noise: Three Women Compose Saturday, Dec. 11 | 8:00 pm |Houghton Chapel
The Boston Modern Orchestra Project (BMOP), the most prominent orchestra in the country devoted to playing new orchestral music, will be in residency and perform at Wellesley College during the 2010-11 academic year.  Not only is BMOP is dedicated to commissioning, performing and recording new music, but also to training the next generation of young composers and musicians.  Throughout the year, BMOP members will interact with Department of Music student composers, performers and music historians through master classes, ensemble coachings and classroom visits.
BMOP’s December 11 program will feature music by three cutting-edge women composers—Chen Yi, Arlene Zallman and a world premiere by Wellesley faculty Jenny Olivia Johnson.



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Wellesley Fire Chief among MDA jailbirds

The Muscular Dystrophy Association (MDA) has at least a couple members of the Wellesley community among its “Most Wanted” as part of a fundraising effort. Among them, Rick DeLorie, Wellesley’s fire chief, who asks that you visit this web page (https://www.joinmda.org/2010needhamtelu/rdelorie/) before Sept. 1 to donate in order to keep him from being locked up. Firefighters are well known for supporting the MDA and DeLorie has a particular interest given that he has a nephew with the neuromuscular disease.

Also looking for bail money is Linda Virgilio of The Body Shop in Wellesley. Click here to make a tax deductible donation to keep her from being locked up.

We suspect they aren’t the only Most Wanted characters in town, and while we can’t post something for everyone, feel free to add your info via the comments field if you’re looking to spread the word.



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Wellesley College hosting free Shakespeare

Five members from Actors From the London Stage will be taking up temporary residency at Wellesley College in September and putting on three free performances of A Midsummer Night’s Dream.

It will be one of your first chances to check out the refurbished Alumnae Hall as well.

Shows will be held Sept. 23-25 at 7pm.

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You know you’re from Wellesley MA when…

Depending on how much time you kill surfing the Web, you might very well have come across a website or Facebook page titled something like: “You know you’re from ____ when…”

We had planned to start one up for Wellesley, but sure enough someone beat us to the punch a while back on Facebook. So, feel free to join their group and add to the list, or if you’re not into Facebook, comment away here. Their signs that you’re from Wellesley include that you think Wellesley is better than Weston because we have sidewalks and that you’re convinced White Mountain Creamery has the best ice cream in the world.

As for other Wellesley-focused Facebook pages, a sampling:

* Wellesley Summer Fun and Free (goes beyond Wellesley)

* Centennial Reservation Dog Owners Association

* Wellesley: Save the Grossman’s Sign (which seems to have been inspired at least in part from our April Fool’s masterpiece since it quotes from it and includes pics from it)

* Wellesley College Davis Museum and Cultural Center

* The Swellesley Report fan page (work in progress… open to ideas on what to do on Facebook vs on this site)



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Wellesley College Davis Museum readies Calculated Risks exhibit

Mekuria art, Wellesley College Davis Museum

From the Davis Museum and Cultural Center at Wellesley College:

Calculated Risks, an exhibition celebrating the inventive diversity among the faculty studio artists at Wellesley College, will fill the special exhibition galleries of the Davis Museum from Sept. 15 – Dec. 12.  Featuring 12 artists who range from emerging to internationally acclaimed, the exhibition displays a broad array of approaches to different media, including painting, sculpture, drawing, animation, collage, photography, video, film and interactive digital media.
The opening reception will be held Wednesday, Sept. 15, from 5:30 – 7:30 pm. This will be followed by an outdoor performance at 7:30 pm by Zili Misik and the Cercie Miller Quartet, sponsored by the Music Department.   Artists include Judith Black, Carlos Dorrien, Bunny Harvey, Clara Lieu, Phyllis McGibbon, Salem Mekuria (see image), C. Meng (Qing-Min Meng), Andrew Mowbray, David Teng Olsen, Daniela Rivera, Christine Rogers and Jeffrey Skoller.

A series of related activities will take place in the months to come.

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What $1M and $10.7M buys you in Wellesley

A couple of homes for sale in Wellesley have caught our attention:

*  A 1-bedroom house built in 1922 at 2 Lake Rd. on Morses Pond features a dock and separate artist’s studio. According to a listing on Zillow, “There will be a sealed bid on this property on Monday August 30th. Showings until August 27th.” The house is listed for $1M.

2 lake rd wellesley ma

* If that’s not rich enough for your blood, perhaps we can interest you in a 20-room Colonial at 19 Pembroke Rd. with 8.5 bathrooms and 15K sq. ft. of living space. Asking price: $10.7M as listed by Coldwell Banker as MLS #71098157  If you’re a big house fan you might wanna snap this up: According to this piece in Time, McMansions are on the way out.

19 pembroke, wellesley MA

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Wellesley real estate update: When will storefronts fill up?

I’m not sure how the current empty storefront situation in Wellesley Square and other parts of town compares historically, but a bunch of those spaces sure have been vacant for a while. It’s not like we haven’t had any businesses open — Upper Crust Pizzeria where SCORE used to be, the Papa Gino’s at 254 Washington St., the CVS coming to Rte. 9 — but there’s plenty of room for newcomers.

I’ve done the rounds with realtors looking to lease these properties and the consensus is that there’s plenty of interest, but it’s unclear just how soon any of the key spots will be filled. In some cases the space is too big and in other cases there are limitations, such as that food establishments aren’t allowed.

“The retail world is beginning to show signs of improvement from an on the ground leasing perspective,” according to Paul Grossman, senior associate/retail leasing with CB Richard Ellis/Grossman Retail Advisors.  “I think the Wellesley Central St market will continue to improve and be one of the first markets in Massachusetts to command a low retail vacancy rate again.  Not only are the demographics at the top of list, but Central Street also draws from all of the surroundings towns. ”

Perhaps most notable among the empty storefronts  in Wellesley is the old Kaps menswear spot at 54 Central St., which features 2,000 sq. ft. of storefront space plus another 900 sq. ft. basement space. It has been vacant since early 2009.

Kaps space 54 Central St., Wellesley MA

Mary Beth Grimm, with Prudential Town and Country Real Estate (website has more pictures of the former Kaps space) says she has had increased interest in the Kaps space — which she calls “a special location” in the heart of Wellesley Square and has shown it to several serious potential clients. Though Grimm notes there are challenges (the landlord won’t allow a restaurant). “There is a growing concern from the neighbors and residents  that have called to inquire about the status of Kaps,” she adds.

Also on that stretch, Talbot’s Kids cleared out in 2008 and space is still available at 50 Central St.

Talbot's Kids 50 Central space Wellesley MA

Annette Born from Urban/Born Associates, which has the old Betsy’s site at 102 Central St. near the fire station in its portfolio, says: “There is activity, but some of the spaces are fairly large so finding the right creditworthy tenant takes time.” (The Betsy’s space has about 4,000 sq. ft about evenly split between street level and a lower/storage level.) UBA also has a listing for 67 Central St., where Clarks shoe store is located, noting that the space is available for lease as needed in that the current tenant will vacate.

Betsy's 102 Central St. Wellesley MA

Down the street near Milestone and Thunder is a vacant space at 15 Central St., which  Bank of America left earlier this year. The rental rate for the 2,211 sq. ft. spot  is “negotiable,” according to realtor CBRE-GRA’s website. Grossman says there is interest, and to expect a traditional retail use like another bank (no food establishment, though).

15 Central St. Wellesley MA Bank of America

Also in the Square, Linear Retail’s Central Plaza properties (the Gap, Wellesley Booksmith etc stretch) includes several locations with expiring leases next year, though that doesn’t mean those businesses won’t re-up. The Booksmith was put up sale earlier this year by the owner and there has not been a taker yet.

Newly empty is the 552 Washington St. space formerly occupied by College Square Pizza and the downstairs space recently vacated by Tails Doggie Boutique, both on the block where a Space for Lease sign hangs from Sullivan Co.

552 Washington St, College Square Pizza, Wellesley

Sullivan Co. Wellesley MA washington St

Stretching outside Wellesley Square out toward Wellesley Hills, there’s also the old St. Moritz Bike & Ski location at 475 Washington St., still looking for a new tenant to fill its 10,100  sq. ft. since the sporting goods store closed earlier this year. Terms there are negotiable, too, according to Equity Partners, which is also looking to lease property at Playhouse Square at 380 Washington St.

Dennis Di Schino, president of Equity Partners, says there’s been “considerable interest” in the former St. Moritz space, which boasts a rare combination of lots of space and 37 off-street parking spaces. “We have had interest from many different types of uses from retail to medical,” he says, noting the only thing the space can’t be used for is a restaurant.

St. Moritz, Wellesley MA

West of Wellesley Square next to the former Wellesley Inn site, funeral home J.S. Waterman recently departed, leaving a 7,650 sq. ft property at 392 Washington St. It’ll cost you $23.50 per sq. ft. per year under a 5-year deal to secure that property from Northeast Select Properties, which promotes the “attractive interior finishes throughout” the 3-story building.

JS Waterman 392 Washington St. Wellesley MA

Also still looking for a tenant is 1 Crest Rd., vacated by Sweet Beads in January.

Before you know it, a replacement will be needed for Whole Foods in Wellesley Hills since that business is moving west into the old Star Market space.

Over in Linden Square, spaces have filled up pretty well over the past couple of years, though plenty of spots are still available, including next to Unleashed by Petco and several spots are available alongside Massage Envy.

If it makes you feel any better, at least we know Wellesley’s not alone in seeing a depressed real estate market. And like Grossman’s says, there’s a good chance our market will recover sooner than others.



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Jimmy’s Cafe expanding hours

Jimmy's Cafe, Wellesley MA

The Townsman features an update on Jimmy’s Cafe, a Wellesley restaurant on Linden Street whose newish owners are sprucing up the menu, have brought back an original chef and are expanding hours to include Sundays for brunch and dinner. We’d love to see them add a website as well.

Jimmy’s didn’t make our list of most expensive dishes in Wellesley.

Read the Townsman’s story here.

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