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The Swellesley Report

Since 2005: More than you really want to know about Wellesley, Mass.

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Business Buzz: UK’s Clarendon Fine Art opening Wellesley gallery; Wellesley Books signs on for 5 more years

January 6, 2026 by Deborah Brown

The latest Wellesley, Mass., business news:

 

UK’s Clarendon Fine Art opening Wellesley gallery

The UK’s Clarendon Fine Art plans to further its reach into the United States with a new gallery in Wellesley Square at 25 Central St., the former location of Laurel Grove.

The business runs dozens of galleries in the UK, plus one in Westport, Ct. that opened about three years ago. It specializes in international, contemporary, and modern art.

We’ve reached out to Clarendon’s property director for more details, and will update this post if we hear back.

Clarendon is set to meet with the Wellesley Design Review Board this week regarding minor construction and a sign review. Plans are to remove one of two entries at the property, and make the remaining one ADA compliant.

Clarendon Fine Art
Clarendon Fine Art rendering submitted to town

 


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Wellesley Books sticking around—book lovers breathe a sigh of relief

 

Wellesley Books, photo by Brice MacLaren
Wellesley Books, photo by Brice MacLaren

Wellesley Books, the beloved literary cornerstone of Wellesley Square, is officially staying put. Owners Bill and Gillian Kohli delighted the community with the news that they have renewed their lease at 82 Central St. for another five years.

In a heartfelt social media post, the Kohlis extended a deep sense of gratitude to their patrons, saying, “We couldn’t continue to do what we love without you— whether you’ve attended an author reading, shared a visit to the bookstore with your family and friends, bought a secondhand paperback or a big bag of new hardcovers, or ordered a book or audio on our website, thank you from all of us.” This lease renewal ensures that the vibrant spirit of independent bookselling will continue to thrive in Wellesley.

The celebration continues as Wellesley Books rolls out a stellar lineup of in-store events for January and February. Get ready to mark your calendars—here’s the complete roster of authors coming to town.


Know of Wellesley businesses coming or going? Please tip us off: theswellesleyreport@gmail.com

Filed Under: Art, Books, Business

     

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Wellesley Toy Shop closes after 32 years in business

January 4, 2026 by Bob Brown

 

Wellesley Toy Shop has closed its business in Wellesley Square after 32 years of supplying area kids and kids at heart with the latest and classic toys.

Even Elmo was a regular at the store, or at least during Wellesley’ Square’s Holiday Stroll.

elmo wellesley toy shop

 

The shop, at 59 Central St., posted a message on its storefront thanking customers, employees, and its landlord.

Tributes to owner Andy Brown, his staff, and the shop have been pouring in.

Alicia Talanian wrote: “Andy and his team were such a constant in Wellesley Square. Such strong supporters of Wellesley kids—He set up a table for my son to sign and sell his self published book during July Jubilation and carried his Bitcoin book all year—refusing to keep a profit. Downtown Wellesley will never be the same.”

Cynthia Sheppard commented on this post: “Very sad indeed. Online shopping has really taken a toll on local communities. Another wonderful toy store in Concord went out of business several years ago as well. We must shop local while we can! It matters!”

Wellesley Toy Shop shifted into its now shuttered space about 10 years ago after the related Wellesley Gift Shop closed.

One silver lining is that the Toy Shop has established a partnership with Learning Express of Needham. You can redeem any Wellesley Toy Shop gift cards you have on hand at the Learning Express store.

Running independent retail businesses has become increasingly challenging with the rise of online shopping, but here’s hoping another original will fill that space.

Andy Brown, Wellesley Toy Shop
Wellesley Toy Shop’s Andy Brown with fidget spinner in 2017

 

Wellesley Toy Shop closing after 32 years https://t.co/kRZ2ffaSrv

— swellesley (@swellesley) January 5, 2026

 


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Filed Under: Business, Kids

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Business Buzz: My Gym Children’s Fitness Center coming to Wellesley Square; YMCA has new CFO

December 31, 2025 by Deborah Brown

My Gym Children’s Fitness Center is coming to Wellesley Square in winter 2026 with a goal of keeping kids ages three months to ten years active and fit. Offerings in the former Rock the Spectrum space at 34 Central St. will include foundational mobility, gymnastics, dance, Gym Ninjas, camps, and special events, all age-appropriate, all with the goal of supporting healthy childhood development.

The space has a history of being something of a rumpus room over at least the past 40 years. In a good way. We Rock the Spectrum brought joy to the space for four years as a sensory gym, a place where kids never had to say they were sorry for who they were.

Before that, Wellesley Kidville, a self-described “happy place” for families, kept the space full of energy and fun as a pre-school, camp, art/music/dance studio, playground, salon, and birthday party center for seven years.

And many in town will remember Rugged Bear, which closed in 2011 after decades outfitting Wellesley kids in winter gear, scout and private school uniforms, and sensible play clothes.

No matter what’s been in that corner spot in the Square, any kid who burst through the doors had to play on one thing. That ramp. Sure Wellesley has brand-new playgrounds, beautiful gyms, fields galore. But the Rugged Bear/Kidville/Rock the Spectrum/My Gym ramp is probably the most popular piece of play equipment ever to make Wellesley kids happy (if not always their parents).

My Gym Fitness Center, Wellesley
Ryan Debin, CEO and Founder of Momentum Enterprises, left, with a well-wisher. Those “For Lease” signs at 34 Central St. are history.

My Gym is one of five brands under the Momentum Enterprises umbrella and reinforces Momentum’s commitment to creating year-round opportunities for play and growth.

“Opening our eleventh My Gym location in Wellesley is an exciting milestone for Momentum Enterprises,” said Ryan Debin, CEO and Founder of Momentum Enterprises. “Everything we do is rooted in helping families feel connected, supported, and inspired. We’re proud to bring a space to Wellesley where we can increase “Smile-Watt Hours” to children as they move, grow, and build confidence.”


Beyond Wellesley—YMCA has new CFO

The West Suburban YMCA has appointed Jim Chatterton, YMCAJim Chatterton as its new Chief Financial Officer. Jim brings more than 25 years of financial leadership experience in the nonprofit and higher education sectors.

Jim has a long personal connection to the YMCA mission. His children attended Camp Chickami and learned to swim at the Quincy YMCA, and he spent many years in Y-sponsored basketball leagues growing up. He’s excited to bring his expertise and passion for the Y’s mission to the West Suburban community.

Chatterton assumed the role of CFO on December 1, supporting the YMCA’s continued growth and community impact.

Check out Swellesley’s Summer Camps page for Y camps, Wellesley camps, ALL the camps.


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Filed Under: Business

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Wellesley’s Fiorella’s restaurant expanding into former Papa Wheelies space

December 21, 2025 by Bob Brown

Fiorella’s Trattoria in Wellesley is adding 47 seats by expanding into space formerly occupied by the Papa Wheelies bike shop at the corner of Washington and Church Streets. This will bring the Italian restaurant’s interior seating capacity to nearly 90, while it has 20 outdoor seats seasonally.

“The expansion will hopefully allow us to better serve our guests and create a more comfortable space with the flexibility for larger groups,” says Fiorella’s Rémon Karian.

The Select Board on Dec. 16 approved changes at Fiorella’s, which opened in Wellesley in 2019 (see hearing on Wellesley Media recording about 27 minutes in).

Karian says the expansion should be complete early in the new year.

During the hearing, a neighbor spoke out about traffic and stormwater management concerns. At least some traffic and parking issues in and near Wellesley Square could be addressed through a comprehensive streetscape project the town has planned.

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Photo by Brice MacLaren


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Filed Under: Business, Restaurants

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Wellesley business buzz: black & blue has new events space; Boston Sports Medical Center opens at 900 Worcester; how to toss your tree

December 16, 2025 by Deborah Brown

The latest Wellesley, Mass., business buzz

black & Blue Steak and Crab opens new events space

black & blue Wellesley has a fabulous new warm and sophisticated event space, perfect for intimate celebrations, business gatherings, and special occasions. The Club Room is a spacious private dining room accommodates up to 40 guests and sits adjacent to black & blue’s impressive wine wall.

The Board Room can hold 14 guests for a sit-down meal, and has a high-definition television with PC connectivity and high-speed wireless internet access. (We’re guessing most will attend in-person for these meetings.)

There are three private events menus, which offer options for meat eaters, seafood lovers, and vegetarians. Main dish choices include filet mignon (of course), salmon or scallops; and chicken, pasta, and more. The prix fixe menu includes an appetizer platter, salad, and dessert.

black & blue steak and crab, Wellesley
black & blue steak and crab, Wellesley


Boston Sports Medical Center opens at 900 Worcester

The BMC Health Sports Medicine Center is now seeing patients at the Boston Sports Institute,  900 Worcester St., (route 9, eastbound side). The practice provides tailored care for sports-related injuries and musculoskeletal conditions. BMC also provides regenerative medicine options, ultrasound guided treatments, concussion evaluations, and walk-in times on Mondays for weekend sports injuries. Whether you’re a high school athlete, a casual exerciser, or a professional athlete, the BMC doctors can help you get back to play, back to school, or back to work.

900 worcester street sports center
BMC is located inside Boston Sports Institute at 900 Worcester St.


Beyond Wellesley—Debsan in Natick Center on the market

For almost 80 years, the Greenberg family has been instrumental in steering homeowners, decorators, landlords, and contractors to the perfect decor decisions. Paint, wallpaper, window treatments, carpeting, flooring, upholstery—if Debsan didn’t have it, your house didn’t need it.

That full-service experience under the present owner comes to an end next month, when Ben Greenberg leaves the business to pursue a well-earned retirement. All is not lost, however, as we hear that Debsan may continue with a new owner.

More here.

Debsan, Natick


Entrepreneurial Christmas spirit

SPONSORED CONTENT—Such a great tradition, bringing a live tree into the house every holiday season. But after the presents have been opened, and that balsam aroma has faded, we start looking side-eye at the beloved symbol of tradition. Time for that tree to go. For those who don’t want to find pine needles of Christmas past in their car for months, WHS graduate Derek Chalmers will pick yours up for a $20 fee. Derek’s got his system down to a science. He picks up when he says he will, brings the tree for recycling, and it’s see you next year. Schedule your pick-up here.


Beth Urdang Gallery, Wellesley
Beth Urdang Gallery, Wellesley

EVENT: Art gallery show
DATE: On view through Jan. 17 (closed Christmas week)
LOCATION: Beth Urdang Gallery, 15 Central in Wellesley, and the Grove Street window 2 blocks away

DESCRIPTION: The Beth Urdang Gallery presents a large exhibition of 50 paintings and photographs whose focus is the exciting tradition of still lifes. Work by artists Peggie Blizard, Victor Schrager, Christopher Stott, Olga Antonova, James Del Grosso, Beth Galton, Charlotte Andry Gibbs, T.M. Glass, Mary Ellen Johnson and JP Terlizzi.


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Filed Under: Business, Health, Restaurants

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Truly’s Next Door offers new events space just steps away from Wellesley ice cream shop

December 15, 2025 by Bob Brown

Truly's Next Door

Truly’s, the longtime Wellesley ice cream shop, has opened a cozy gathering and events space at 35 Grove St., Truly’s original location before it shifted to 39 Grove St. in early 2023.

The meeting space can be rented out by those indulging in sweet treats or not.

The 35-seat space can accommodate kids’ birthday parties, where ice cream will surely be in the mix, or any other sort of meeting, say for parent-teacher organizations. You can bring your own food, just no booze.

The set-up features audio and visual technology, including a 75-inch TV screen, to support meetings.

 

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Truly's Next Door

Truly's Next Door

Owner Steve Marcus says various ideas had been floated for the space but he knew “we didn’t want it to just be storage space.”

Over the years Truly’s has had requests from people to close down the shop for private events. But Marcus says “We never wanted to have a situation where someone was driving here only to find the shop closed to them.”

Truly’s Next Door, he says, “is a creative use that we think will contribute to the Grove Street area of Wellesley Square.”

Renting out meeting space, Marcus acknowledges, is a different business for Truly’s. So he’s brought in Denise White, who has experience managing events at country clubs, as director of event services.

She showed me around the space when I stopped by. The tables and a variety of chairs can be reconfigured on the fly to serve different meeting setups.

Truly's Next Door

The hourly rental rate at Truly’s Next Door is $125, with a discounted rate of $75 an hour for non-profits. Additional discounts given to room rate rental if you are utilizing Truly’s catering.

A website is in the works, where you can currently get on an email list. Also feel free to reach out to Denise White at Denise@Trulys.com or 617-659-8813


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Filed Under: Business

Top employers in Wellesley, Mass.

Top employers in Wellesley, Mass., not including the town itself. In 2024, the top 5 employers remained the same as 9 years ago, and most of the employers on the top 10 list have more or about the same number of employees as they did 9 years ago (Roche Bros. had the biggest decline). This data comes from the town’s FY24 financial report.

top employers in wellesley ma 2024

The town of Wellesley had 1,314 full-time equivalent employees, a number that has risen by close to 90 over the past 10 years.

Latest Wellesey, Mass., job opportunities.

‘The Platinum Workforce’: Wellesley author focuses on boosting human strengths in an AI-driven world

December 12, 2025 by Bob Brown

Trond UndheimWellesley author Trond Arne Undheim, who as a researcher is always looking to the future, has released his eighth book, “The Platinum Workforce.”

We met recently in town to discuss the book, which follows other thought-provoking reads such as 2023’s “Eco Tech” and 2020’s “Pandemic Aftermath.”

After Stanford and MIT research, Undheim has identified core and complementary skills that he says will shape career success as AI and emerging technology reshapes work. We dove into some of the details…

What does “The Platinum Workforce” mean?

 
Think of it like the metal: rare, durable, catalytic. But instead of sitting in a vault, these workers do what AI still can’t: navigate messy problems, connect ideas across fields, and make good decisions when the rules don’t exist yet.

The core message is simple: build human capability first, then add AI. When people skip the foundation—when ChatGPT does everything—their own skills start to slip. I call it “capability drift.” It’s that moment when you’re not sure whether the AI is right or confidently hallucinating.

If your kid is heading to college, they don’t need one more coding bootcamp. They need skills that don’t expire—systems thinking, interdisciplinary communication, the ability to stitch together people, data, and technology. AI becomes a force multiplier only after you’ve built that base.


Platinum-Workforce-profile-high-res

You said society knows almost nothing about running $20B+ gigascale projects. What projects do you mean, and why does it matter?

 
Boston learned this the hard way. The Big Dig started at $2.8B in 1982, ended at $24B with interest—a megaproject that morphed into a gigaproject and shaped the region’s budget for decades.

Now these enormous projects are everywhere: California high-speed rail ($106–135B projected), semiconductor fabs, space programs, climate infrastructure. Historically, think the Panama Canal or the Interstate Highway System—same DNA, different era.

Here’s the Wellesley angle: a surprising number of residents already work at this scale. Finance folks managing multi-billion-dollar portfolios. Biotech leaders running huge R&D pipelines. Developers behind billion-dollar real estate projects. Federal officials navigating DC budgets that make your head spin.

And frankly? This is where the excitement is. This is where society’s biggest challenges get solved—and where the compensation reflects that scale. We’re talking about work with genuine upside, both intellectually and financially. If I’m advising Wellesley families about career paths, I’d say: don’t shy away from gigascale. This is where your kids should aim—it’s important work, it pays well, and it matters.

The problem is we don’t teach people how to operate in that environment. A 22-year-old engineer can make a billion-dollar mistake—or catch a billion-dollar insight. Gigascale work magnifies both brilliance and failure. Our schools haven’t caught up.


You wrote this book for kids entering college, but also for parents and employers. What do you hope they get out of it?

 
This book is deeply personal. I wrote it thinking about my daughter Naya (a Babson freshman, studying in London this semester), my son Jax (16, building his own AI startup), and Zadie—who’s already using Snapchat’s AI to guide decisions in her private life, even though it’s still outlawed in school. That gap between what kids are actually doing and what schools acknowledge tells you everything about where we are with AI integration.

For students: majors matter, but not as much as capabilities. The book lays out 13 future-proof skills—from systems thinking to R&D fluency to coordinating human-AI teams. These are what employers truly hire for, even if they don’t always articulate it well.

For parents: when your kid tells you, “ChatGPT does my homework,” the key question isn’t “Is AI good or bad?” It’s “Do they have the foundation to use it wisely?” Sequence matters.

For employers: hiring based on degrees is breaking down. Skills now depreciate faster than diplomas. The book provides a practical skills taxonomy and hiring framework for a world where job requirements change faster than HR can update the posting.


Where is AI having its most positive and negative impacts right now?

 
Positive: AI is a superpower in medicine (diagnostics), materials science (battery and semiconductor breakthroughs), and software (automating repetitive coding). It lets humans focus on judgment, creativity, and strategic decisions.

Negative:

  1. Capability drift: Students and professionals lose the ability to check the AI’s work.
  2. Equity gaps: The best tools sit behind paywalls. I needed paid versions of Gemini and Claude while writing this book just to get reliable output—and I worry about what that means for schools.
  3. Verification burden: AI produces confident nonsense. Much of my writing time went to fact-checking beautifully phrased errors.

AI is excellent at structure, data, and summaries. But matching voice, style, or deep reasoning? Still early innings. But I have advice on that, too.


How should schools integrate AI?

 
Slow down on teaching “prompt engineering.” Speed up on teaching foundational capability.

Kids need hands-on problem solving—starting ventures, coordinating human-machine workflows, tackling environmental and engineering challenges, practicing systems thinking. Then AI becomes a partner rather than a shortcut.

They also need exposure to risk far earlier. More young professionals now enter roles where mistakes can have billion-dollar consequences—energy grids, climate systems, critical infrastructure. Our curriculum doesn’t match the scale of the responsibility we hand them.

Above all, teach metacognition—the skill of choosing what to learn and how to adapt. That stays valuable long after today’s tools are obsolete.

The reality is that AI policies need to constantly evolve—what made sense last year is already outdated. I’d love to consult with local schools and colleges on developing adaptive AI policies that actually match how students live and learn, rather than policies that kids just work around.


Talk about your use of AI in writing and marketing the book.

 
I used AI extensively, but never as a ghostwriter. The core thesis and the 13 skills came from decades of work. AI helped me pressure-test chapters, generate scenarios, and tighten language.

I used several models—Gemini, Claude, ChatGPT, Copilot, Llama, Deepseek—and asked them to challenge each other. They disagreed constantly, which revealed blind spots and reduced hallucinations. (Deepseek often just told me it was “busy”—a very human moment from a machine.)

But AI also doubled my revision time. It mixes flashes of brilliance with confident errors, and it doesn’t cite where it borrows ideas from. You need strong underlying judgment to manage that.

For me, AI expanded my thinking—while making the process messier. That’s the Human+ era.


Beyond AI, what other big shifts should workers pay attention to?

 
Gigascale operations: Projects that routinely exceed $1B—and often $20B+. Everyone eventually interacts with work at this scale, even if indirectly. And again—this is where the action is. This is where careers get built, where problems that matter get solved, where compensation reflects impact.

Cascading risks: Climate, cyber, supply chains, geopolitics—they now stack and amplify each other. Workers need tools to spot early warning signs and operate under constant volatility.

Interoperability mindset: Modern work requires translating between people, disciplines, technologies, and organizations. The future belongs to connectors.

Together, these trends define the Platinum Workforce.


How long did this book take?

 
Two years of concentrated effort, built on 30 years of research—from MIT Startup Exchange to Stanford CISAC.

The Stanford commute became part of the story: Tuesday dawn flights from Boston, long research days, Thursday red-eyes home. I did that for two years. The Sahai Family Foundation made the work possible; coffee and Norwegian stubbornness made it survivable.

But the big insight from that period was clear: skills—not technology—determine whether we adapt or stumble when systems break.


Anything else to cover?

 
The book moves from diagnosis (why systems are breaking) to capability (what skills we need) to practice (how to teach them). It’s meant to be action-oriented.

My Norwegian-American background—from serving as National Expert on e-Government at the European Commission to MIT to Stanford—gives me a cross-Atlantic view of how different societies respond to disruption. It informs every chapter.


 

More about the author and book:

 

“The Platinum Workforce” can be found at Wellesley Books (“My first choice—please support our indie stores.”) and other independent bookstores can order it. It’s also available at online booksellers.

Undheim is looking to do local author events, and says he’s happy to speak with local schools, book clubs, or parent networks about AI, careers, and education choices.

The author can be reached on LinkedIn and via email. “I love hearing how people are navigating this new AI-driven world,” he says.
 


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