Beech Lot Closed: Parking Area Resurfaced This Week

Most people know the Beech Street Center as the home of the Council of Aging, where events and concerts take place and, for one day, a center of attention on election day 2012.

It is also known for a number of the neighbors as a place to stash their cars overnight.

But beginning on Wednesday, Aug. 13 and running through Sunday, Aug. 17, the lot will be closed so the parking area can be resurfaced for the upcoming winter season.

Belmont Police wants to public to know that any vehicles left on the site after 11 p.m, on Wednesday will be towed.

What’s Up this Week: Cryogenics for Kids, Dragons & Dreams

Less than a month before the beginning of the school year but it still feels like summer as there is a limited amount of activities around Belmont this week. But next week will see the beginning of fall sports practice.

• Join the Belmont Public Library for the following movies for children on Tuesday, August 12 at noon Assembly Room

  •    Rosie’s Walk
  •    The Little Red Hen
  •    Petunia
  •    The Pigs’ Wedding
  •    Trouble in the Barkers’ Class
  •    Beverly Billingsly Borrows a Book

Belmont resident Arnie Rosen has played guitar for more than 50 years and isn’t bad on several other instruments as well. The wonderful song leader is back to the Beech Street Center, 266 Beech St., by popular demand for a sing-along on Tuesday, Aug. 12, at 1:15 p.m. The concert is free.

• Can you freeze a balloon? What does liquid nitrogen look like? How cold is “cold”? Learn which items freeze or defrost fastest and why cryogenics is such a hot field at the Einstein’s Workshop program for Young Adults about Cryogenics on Tuesday, Aug. 12 from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. in the Belmont Public Library’s Assembly Room. Registration is required either online or by calling 617-993-2870. For ages 10 and up.

• The Belmont Public Library is providing one-on-one Digital Library Help on Wednesday, August 6, from 11 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. in the Reference Room. Learn how to download eBooks from the library and set up a device. Get started with Zinio to read free digital magazines. E-mail and Internet basics, social media, or basic computer skills. Registration is required; register online or call 617-993-2870 to register by phone. Some services require downloading an app. Please come prepared with your Apple ID, Adobe ID, Amazon Account information, or other password and log in information for your device.

• Duplicate Bridge Club meets from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. every Wednesday at the Beech Street Center at 266 Beech St. The club holds American Contact Bridge League-sanctioned games. All are welcome to play. Cost is $7. Phone: 339-223-6484 for more information.

• The group Sciencetellers presents Dragons & Dreams, stories and science come to life through visually exciting experiments, will occur on Wednesday, Aug. 13 starting at 2 p.m. in the Belmont Public Library’s Assembly Room. If you’re in the room, you’re part of the story.

• Move, dance and sing along with acclaimed Brazilian musician Sulinha Boucher on Thursday, Aug. 14, from 10:30 a.m. to 11 a.m. in the library’s Assembly Room

State Sen. Will Brownsberger will be holding office hours on Friday, Aug. 15, at 10 a.m. at the Beech Street Center.

A Century After the First, Belmont Resident Ponders If Another World War is Around the Corner

From her room in the Central Station Hotel in Newcastle, Willena Benton excitedly wrote to her hometown newspaper on the great events taking place outside her window.

“England has sent an ultimatum demanding an answer before midnight. That probably means WAR!” Benton wrote in a letter dated Aug. 4, 1914 to the Belmont Courier; the newspaper started in 1889 by her husband, Everett Chamberlin Benton, Belmont’s most-prominent resident.

On a grand tour of northern Norway after the wedding of their second daughter, Dorothy, at their Oakley Road estate, the Bentons were stranded in England after passenger liners suspended North Sea trips to Christiania (which returned to its original name, Oslo, 11 years later) due to the threat of the Imperial German Navy venturing out of its Kiel base.

The Bentons, along with two dozen of their fellow Belmont residents – including Henry Yeoman, assistant Harvard dean, and his wife of 72 Trapelo Road – were attempting to find passage home among the few boats traveling to New York yet found “our letter of credit and our American Express cheques were not cashable” said Benton, leaving many, according to the Courier, “financially embarrassed abroad.”

“Nevertheless, strange to say, we are enjoying the excitement,” wrote Benton, especially all things “in a military way;” the marching of the Scotch regiments with kilts and bagpipes, the building of sandbags entrenchments, the weaving of barbed wire “and the gathering of the British war vessels in the Firth of Forth.”

Benton’s first-hand observation hardly conveyed the world-changing events beginning with an incident the Courier noted in its review of foreign events a month earlier. Between the news of Ernest Shackleton receiving a grant for his proposed Antarctic exposition and the typhoid epidemic in Jamaica, a small note informed Belmont readers that “Archduke Francis Ferdinand, heir to the dual monarchy of Austria-Hungry, and his wife were shot to death in the main street of Sarajevo, the Bosnian capital.”

A century later, countries across Europe this week observed the beginning of hostilities that would be called the “Great War” and later World War I. And while the war – that took the lives of nine million combatants and seven million civilians – forever changed the political and social norms around the world, many contend the conflict’s lessons are not restricted to historians; they are relevant today.

In an article in the Atlantic titled, “Just How Likely is Another World War,” Pinehurst Road’s Graham Allison takes a comprehensive assessment of the similarities and differences between 1914 and 2014 and just how close the world is to revisiting the unthinkable. 

“In this centennial of what participants named the ‘Great War,’ many have recalled Mark Twain’s observation that while history never repeats itself, it does sometimes rhyme,” writes Allison, the director of the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs and Douglas Dillon Professor of Government at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government.

Sold in Belmont: Pretty Payson Terrace Colonial Goes for a Million

A weekly recap of residential properties bought in the past seven days in the “Town of Homes.”

• 352 School St. English Tudor-style (1933), Sold for: $960,000. Listed at $859,000. Living area: 2,209 sq.-ft. 9 rooms; 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths. On the market: 54 days.

• 34 Falmouth St. Philadelphia-style two-family with Dutch Gambrel roof (1912), Sold for: $880,000. Listed at $799,000. Living area: 3,076 sq.-ft. 12 rooms; 6 bedrooms, 2.5 baths. On the market: 53 days.

• 207 Claflin St. Colonial (1930), Sold for: $875,000. Listed at $875,000. Living area: 1,766 sq.-ft. 7 rooms; 3 bedrooms, 1.5 baths. On the market: 60 days.

• 100 Common St. #6. Two-floor condominium in the Grand Commons Mansion, Sold for: $477,000. Listed at $499,000. Living area: 1,668 sq.-ft. 5 rooms; 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. On the market: 115 days.

• 11 Maple St. Two-family (1910), Sold for: $705,000. Listed at $759,900. Living area: 2,693 sq.-ft. 12 rooms; 5 bedrooms, 3 baths. On the market: 84 days.

• 23 Clairemont Rd. Colonial revival on “Old Belmont Hill” (1933), Sold for: $1,720,000. Listed at $1,600,000. Living area: 3,450 sq.-ft. 14 rooms; 7 bedrooms, 3.5 baths. On the market: 77 days.

 • 49 Payson Ter. Brick, center-entrance Colonial (1925), Sold for: $1,020,000. Listed at $1,095,000. Living area: 2,731 sq.-ft. 10 rooms; 4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths. On the market: 63 days.

West Nile Risk Now at Moderate Risk Level in Belmont

The Massachusetts Department of Public Health announced yesterday, Thursday, Aug. 7 that West Nile virus mosquito samples have been identified recently in Boston and Newton. The risk level for Boston, Newton and neighboring communities including Belmont has been increased to moderate, according to a press release from the Belmont Department of Health.

WNV is most commonly transmitted to humans by the bite of an infected mosquito. The mosquitoes that carry this virus are common throughout the state and are found in urban as well as more rural areas. While WNV can infect people of all ages, people over 50 are at higher risk for severe infection.

As always, there are a few precautions people can do to protect themselves and their families:

Avoid Mosquito Bites

  • Be Aware of Peak Mosquito Hours: The hours from dusk to dawn are peak biting times for many mosquitoes. Consider rescheduling outdoor activities that occur during evening or early morning. If you are outdoors at any time and notice mosquitoes around you, take steps to avoid being bitten by moving indoors, covering up and/or wearing repellant.
  • Clothing Can Help to reduce mosquito bites. Although it may be difficult to do when it’s hot, wearing long-sleeves, long pants and socks when outdoors will help keep mosquitoes away from your skin.
  • Apply Insect Repellent when you go outdoors. Use a repellent with DEET (N, N-diethyl-m- toluamide), permethrin, picaridin (KBR 3023), IR3535 or oil of lemon eucalyptus [p-methane 3, 8-diol (PMD)] according to the instructions on the product label.

Mosquito-Proof Your Home

  • Drain Standing Water: Many mosquitoes lay their eggs in standing water. Limit the number of places around your home for mosquitoes to breed by either draining or getting rid of items that hold water. Check rain gutters and drains. Empty any unused flowerpots and wading pools, and change water in birdbaths frequently.
  • Install or Repair Screens: Some mosquitoes like to come indoors. Keep them outside by having tightly-fitting screens on all of your windows and doors.

Information about WNV and reports of WNV activity in Massachusetts during 2014 can be found on the MDPH website at http://www.mass.gov/dph/wnv. Recorded information about WNV is also available by calling the MDPH Public Information Line at 1-866-MASS-WNV (1-866-627-7968).

Celebrate National Farmers Market Week at Belmont’s

Celebrate National Farmers’ Market Week in Belmont on Market Day on Thursday, Aug. 7, one of the 8,268 markets in the US.

Still River Winery, Sugar + Grain, Rhythm ‘n Wraps and Seasoned and Spiced joins the market’s weekly vendors from 2 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.

This week’s food truck is Rhythm ‘n Wraps, from 3 p.m. until Market closing.

The market is located in the municipal parking lot in Belmont Center, at the intersection of Cross Street and Channing Road.

In the Events Tent:

Tasting: Savinos Grill, the Cushing Square restaurant featuring foods of Italy and the surrounding Mediterranean regions, from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.

Storytime: The Belmont Public Library sponsors storytime for preschool and older children. Deborah Borsuk from the Children’s Department will read from 4 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Music: Karen Allendoerfer and Eric Wetzel return to play classical duets and solo pieces on the violin from 5 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Musicians from the Arlington Philharmonic at 5:30 p.m. Allendoerfer (viola), Chandreyee Das (violin), Pamela Ross (oboe), and Sandy Reismann (cello) will play classical and popular music at 5:30 p.m.

Bring non-perishable items each week for the Belmont Food Pantry. Find out about the Belmont Food Pantry and see how the Market supports them.

 

A New CVS Coming to … Watertown

CVS Pharmacy, the Woonsocket, RI-based nationwide drug store chain, has announced it will be opening a new store they see serving the retail and pharmacy needs of a good portion of Belmont residents.

But the second largest US pharmacy concern will be locating its newest store across the border in Watertown, on Mt. Auburn Street, not in the Town of Homes.

The announcement made on the Watertown News website will please Belmont residents in the southeastern part of town (precincts 6 and 7) who have store located at the corner of Mt. Auburn and Arlington streets, across from the Tufts Health Plan offices. Watertown’s Arlington Street intersects with Belmont Street at Grove Street.

The new store will be 14,000 sq.-ft. with approximately 70 parking spaces, replacing a gas station, the city’s Elks Club and another commercial building.

How the new Watertown store will affect the long-standing rumor of CVS looking to move from its current cramped location at 60 Leonard St. – the store has a total of 8,000 sq.-ft. with a smaller retail footprint – to a larger outcrop in the former Macy’s site at 75 Leonard St. remains up in the air.

After serving Belmont for more than 70 years, first as a Filene’s and later Macy’s, the department store closed in January 2013. Somerville-based Locatelli Realty Trust owns the Macy’s site as well as a good portion of eastern Leonard Street.

A second Belmont CVS is located at 264 Trapelo Rd. between Cushing and Central squares.

Under CVS criteria for new stores, the company requires locations to be free-standing sites with the store being roughly 100 by 140 feet with approximately 13,000 square feet of retail and pharmacy space. It must also be in a high traffic location, have easy access from the street for customers and have between 75 to 85 parking spaces.

The second store in Watertown – the chain has a 24-hour store in Watertown Square – will have the draw of plenty of parking spaces and easy access, both which the Belmont Center store lacks. CVS has a second 24-hour store down Concord Avenue at Fresh Pond in Cambridge.

The Week Ahead in Belmont: Chef Gerry Making Flat Bread and Tea at the Beech

If there is a non-holiday week in which Belmont becomes the preverbal ghost town, it is the first week in August. You can bring your antique cannon to Leonard Street, fire it and miss just about any living creature known to man before watching  the ball roll into the Wellington Brook. Here IS what’s happening in Belmont this week:

• Chef Gerry is back! After making sushi, California rolls and other great food at Belmont Public Library, Belmont resident Gerry Connolly – a Cambridge School of Culinary Arts Professional Chef Program graduate with 20 years of experience as a personal chef and event caterer – is coming to make flat breads and dressings on Tuesday, August 5 at 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. This event is free thanks to the generosity of Chef Gerry and the Friends of the Belmont Public Library.  Space is limited, so please sign up online or sign up by phone at 617-993-2870.

• It’s game day this Friday at the Beech Street Center as it holds “Tea and Games on the Patio” on Tuesday, August 5 at 1 p.m. There will be Scrabble, checkers, cribbage and Trivial Pursuit along with iced tea and cookies.

• Noon Movies for children on Tuesday, August 5 in the Assembly Room of the Belmont Public Library. Come join us for the following movies for children:

  • Yo! Yes?
  • Here Comes the Cat
  • Island of the Skog
  • The Nutshell Kids
  • Where the Wild Things Are.
• Mime Robert Rivest presents “Laughter is the Best Medicine,” a unique program of comedy and movement on Wednesday, August 6 from 2 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. in the Belmont Public Library’s Assembly Room.

• Receive a free hearing test at the Beech Street Center on Wednesday, August 6 from 12:30 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. Your hearing aid batteries can be replaced. Mass Audiology offers this service free of charge to Center participants. Make your appointment by stopping by the front desk or by calling 617-993-2970.

• The Belmont Public Library is providing one-on-one Digital Library Help on Wednesday, August 6, from 7 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. in the Reference Room. Learn how to download eBooks from the library and set up a device. Get started with Zinio to read free digital magazines. E-mail and Internet basics, social media, or basic computer skills. Registration is required; register online or call 617-993-2870 to register by phone. Some services require downloading an app. Please come prepared with your Apple ID, Adobe ID, Amazon Account information, or other password and log in information for your device.

• Duplicate Bridge Club meets from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. every Wednesday at the Beech Street Center at 266 Beech St. The club holds American Contact Bridge League-sanctioned games. All are welcome to play. Cost is $7. Phone: 339-223-6484 for more information.

• Local musician Rubi performs original songs and traditional favorites on Thursday, Aug. 7, 9:30 a.m. or 10:30 p.m. in the Belmont Public Library’s Assembly Room.

Musical Summer Sweet: Belmont Community Band Premiers at Payson Park

What began earlier this year as the hope of a summer diversion for Belmont musicians succeeded beyond the modest expectations of its leader as the Belmont Summer Community Band performed its inaugural concert at a special performance of the Payson Park Music Festival on Thursday, July 31.

With only three rehearsals scheduled before its first-ever show, conductor Arto Asadoorian was hoping for the best from the approximately 50 musician who showed up at Belmont High School a week before the concert. Current and former Belmont High School students and residents, many “who had not picked up their instrument in years” made up the group, said Asadoorian.

“I wasn’t quite sure what to expect because this is the first time we’ve done it,” said Asadoorian, who is also the Belmont School District’s director of fine arts and performing arts.

“But they came to the first rehearsal and knocked everything out of the park,” he said.

On Thursday, the group performed a wide variety of pieces that included well-known works for band – Ralph Vaughan Williams’s “Folk Song Suite” and “Country Gardens” by Percy Grainger – as well as modern works such as the soundtrack to “How to Train Your Dragon,” by John Powell.

The evening’s concert began with a performance by di bostoner klezmer, a trio of talented musicians who played European and American klezmer music. Dena Ressler, the Program Coordinator at Belmont’s Beech Street Center, led the musicians.

At the end of the evening’s showcase – sponsored by the Belmont Lions Club – Asadoorian said the band accomplished everything he had hoped for and is thinking of doing this again next year.

“It was a lot of fun when all you have to do is stand before them and wave your arms,” he said, adding “the toughest part about this evening is getting all the instruments into the truck to bring them back to the school.”

What began earlier this year as the hope of a summer diversion for Belmont musicians succeeded beyond the modest expectations of its leader as the Belmont Summer Community Band performed its inaugural concert at a special performance of the Payson Park Music Festival on Thursday, July 31.

With only three rehearsals scheduled before its first-ever show, conductor Arto Asadoorian was hoping for the best from the approximately 50 musician who showed up at Belmont High School a week before the concert. Current and former Belmont High School students and residents, many “who had not picked up their instrument in years” made up the group, said Asadoorian.

“I wasn’t quite sure what to expect because this is the first time we’ve done it,” said Asadoorian, who is also the Belmont School District’s director of fine arts and performing arts.

“But they came to the first rehearsal and knocked everything out of the park,” he said.

On Thursday, the group performed a wide variety of pieces that included well-known works for band – Ralph Vaughan Williams’s “Folk Song Suite” and “Country Gardens” by Percy Grainger – as well as modern works such as the soundtrack to “How to Train Your Dragon,” by John Powell.

The evening’s concert began with a performance by di bostoner klezmer, a trio of talented musicians who played European and American klezmer music. Dena Ressler, the Program Coordinator at Belmont’s Beech Street Center, led the musicians.

At the end of the evening’s showcase – sponsored by the Belmont Lions Club – Asadoorian said the band accomplished everything he had hoped for and is thinking of doing this again next year.

“It was a lot of fun when all you have to do is stand before them and wave your arms,” he said, adding “the toughest part about this evening is getting all the instruments into the truck to bring them back to the school.”

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Belmont House of the Week: 37 Franklin St.

A friend of mine once complained that newly-constructed homes have expanded in size to where “you need a pair of roller skates to get from the bedroom to the bath.”

“What has happened to a cozy house?” she pondered.

For those of a similar mind, then seek out residential structures built during and immediately after the Depression of the 1930s. Attempting to keep building costs down, homes were built with necessity in mind, rather than the conspicuous consumption of “The Roaring ’20”: “[L]arge homes were built in the 1930′s, but they were less ornate and less concerned with the type of aesthetics common during the Victorian era” according to the website House Crazy. Livable space was at a premium with every inch used with the modern concept of personal space limited to closing the bedroom door.

If you’re looking for cozy, the white house for sale on Franklin Street should be considered. The 1937 Colonial has ten rooms in approximately 1,900 sq.-ft. located on a fifth of an acre. The house has a front-to-back living room with fireplace, wainscoting, crown molding and French doors. There is a grand-screened porch with kitchen and dining room access for outdoor entertaining three-quarters of the year. The dining room has chair rails, and lead glass beveled windows over-looking the screened porch. The kitchen has plenty of storage and room for a table and chairs. There is an electric stove, but the is a gas connection. A study, just off the living room, can also be used as a play room or office. The second floor has four to five bedrooms, one currently being used as a library, all having polished hardwood floors and new windows and the space provides lots of options to keep as-is or reconfigure for an additional bath and/or laundry. The property also has a garage and walk-up attic as well.

Price: $799,000

Listed by: Century 21 Adams KC, Anne Mahon