• Sections
    • Arts & Entertainment
    • Bridal
    • Community
    • Education
    • Fashion
    • Food & Drink
    • Health & Wellness
    • Home & Garden
    • MVMA
    • Perspectives
    • Travel
  • Shop Local
    • Arts & Culture
    • Bridal
    • Community
    • Dining & Cuisine
    • Education
    • Entertainment
    • Fashion
    • Financial & Professional Services
    • Florists, Gift & Specialty Shops
    • Health & Wellness
    • Home & Garden
    • Real Estate
  • Calendar
  • Dining Guide
  • Advertise
  • Login

Merrimack Valley Magazine

  • Arts & Entertainment
  • Community
  • Education
  • Fashion
  • Food & Drink
  • Health & Wellness
  • Home & Garden
  • Perspectives
  • Travel

Small Businesses Adjust to Changes in COVID Restrictions

September 10, 2021 by Katie Lovett

Entertainment venues such as trampoline parks, bowling alleys and arcades were hit hard by COVID restrictions as wary customers hesitated to return to indoor entertainment venues that brought people in close contact with others — and state guidelines called for keeping some of them shuttered longer than other businesses.

As summer approached, however, and COVID infection rates declined, many customers felt ready to return to those establishments. Additionally, parents were looking for ways to entertain children on summer vacation.

Staff at Wamesit Lanes in Tewksbury were ready, having spent months preparing for state guidelines to ease in June, said co-owner Don MacLaren Jr.

“Last summer was obviously disheartening; it was difficult to navigate through,” MacLaren says. Before COVID hit, he and his father, who co-own the entertainment complex, had set up a year of events and plans, all of which were wiped clean when the pandemic started.

“We saw that get taken away, and now we had to try to recover and bring that back,” he says.

They made it through the difficult days when customers were still hesitant to go out by keeping customer and staff safety the top priority, MacLaren says.

This summer was much different, he adds. Anticipating the state guidelines to ease in June, MacLaren says they began hiring staff in February and booking entertainment for their large patio, which customers were eager to utilize.

“There was a lot more of a comfort level among our customers and among our staff,” he says.

Indoors, customers were comfortable with extra precautions taken by staff to keep an open lane between each group of bowlers.

“They basically have their own little cubicle,” he says.

“We went above and beyond what was required,” he says. Word began to spread of the extra protocols taken by staff, he adds, which helped draw in customers who knew the virus was being taken seriously. The large space, high ceilings and strong ventilation system also help people feel at ease, he says.

“It came to a point where people just needed to get out and have something to do, and what better place than an entertainment complex,” MacLaren says.

 

At Altitude Trampoline Park in Billerica, which was one of the final businesses allowed to reopen under the state’s phased plan, this summer was busier than they expected, general manager Rick Belding says.

Once the statewide mask mandate was lifted, he notes, customers seemed to be much more comfortable coming in and enjoying the facility.

Billerica instated a townwide mask mandate a couple of weeks ago, but it hasn’t slowed down business, he adds.

The trampoline park is also seeing a bustling birthday party business, Belding says, with an average of 10 parties per weekend. While not as high as pre-COVID, the numbers are climbing.

While the region saw customers ready to go out and spend money again, Merrimack Valley Chamber of Commerce president Joe Bevilacqua says businesses are struggling to find the necessary help to provide their services.

“Every single business I’ve spoken to, even this morning, all say they cannot find any help,” Bevilacqua says.

Without the help, businesses can’t operate as usual even though COVID restrictions have eased, he said. Some have reduced hours, or close for additional days. Others operate at a reduced capacity.

All businesses are facing the same issue, he adds, whether retail, restaurants or the service industry. But as the unemployment benefits program ends, Bevilacqua believes the business community should see an improvement.

“They’re hoping it may encourage people to go back to work,” he says.

Filed Under: Community Tagged With: Altitude Trampoline Park, Billerica, covid19, Local, Small Businesses, Tewksbury, Wamesit Lanes

Little Bitz – Tewksbury Miracle Worker Anne Sullivan

August 24, 2020 by Suzanne DeWitt

The story of Helen Keller and her amazing teacher has its roots right here in the Valley. Anne Sullivan was the oldest child of immigrants who fled the Irish potato famine. When her mother died of tuberculosis in 1874, 8-year-old Anne was sent with her younger brother to live in the almshouse in Tewksbury. The institution was overcrowded and filled with the ill, alcoholics and the “pauper insane.” Her writings recall the place: “Very much of what I remember about Tewksbury is indecent, cruel, melancholy, gruesome in the light of grown-up experience; but nothing corresponding with my present understanding of these ideas entered my child mind. Everything interested me. I was not shocked, pained, grieved or troubled by what happened. Such things happened.” Anne’s brother died after being there only six months. 

An untreated eye infection earlier in her life had left Anne with severely limited vision. Reports of cruelty, sexually perverted practices, and cannibalism were made to the state about the place, and the resulting investigation was spearheaded by a founder of the Perkins School for the Blind in Boston. This turned out to be good news for Anne, who worked up the courage to approach him and ask about attending the school. Her plea was successful, and she moved to the Perkins School in 1880. At age 15, she finally had surgery that improved her vision. 

 

Anne graduated as valedictorian in 1886, and began working with the Keller family in March of the following year. She married a Harvard professor, but unlike the relationship between the two women, the marriage didn’t last. As the years passed, Anne and Helen toured the vaudeville circuit to make ends meet. But despite Anne’s exposure to education and culture, the ugliness of the almshouse never left her. “I doubt if life, or eternity for that matter, is long enough to erase the errors and ugly blots scored upon my brain by those dismal years,” she wrote.

In the late 1920s, Anne’s eyesight began to give out. She traveled to try to re-establish her health, and eventually died in 1936. 

In 1992 a life-size bronze sculpture by Romanian-American Mico Kaufman was erected next to Tewksbury Town Hall. The piece is titled “Water,” and depicts Anne teaching Helen her first miraculous word.  

“Water,” sculpture by Mico Kaufman in Tewksbury, Mass depicts the moment “miracle worker” Anne Sullivan helped Hellen Keller connect language with objects in her world. Photo by Daderot.

Filed Under: Community Tagged With: blind, HellenKeller, teacher, Tewksbury

Little Bitz: Computer Pioneer Dr. An Wang

July 9, 2020 by Christine Lewis

Born in Shanghai in 1920, An Wang came to the United States in 1945 to attend Harvard University. In 1951, he founded the computer company Wang Laboratories in Cambridge along with his friend, Dr. G.Y. Chu. The inventors of a pulse transfer device that made magnetic core memory (the main memory component of a computer before the use of semiconductors) possible, Wang sold the technology to IBM in 1955 for $500,000. He moved the business to Tewksbury in 1963 and then to Lowell in 1976.  

 

Courtesy ComputerHistory.org

One of the first producers of minicomputers, word processors, PCs and microcomputers, Wang also invented the first desktop calculators capable of computing algorithms, which became wildly popular with scientists. By the 1980s, Wang Laboratories was one of the Merrimack Valley’s largest companies, with more than 30,000 employees and annual revenue of nearly $3 billion. Wang was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in 1988.

Famous for his aggressive marketing campaigns and the hands-on role he played in directing Wang’s business strategies, Dr. Wang also founded the Wang Institute of Graduate Studies in Tyngsborough, today a campus of Boston University. A lover of the arts, Wang financed the restoration of Boston’s Metropolitan Theatre in the early 1980s, and today it’s known as The Wang Theatre.

An Wang died of cancer in 1990, and in 1992, facing stiff competition from the growing technology industry, Wang Laboratories filed for bankruptcy. Wang was acquired by a Dutch company in 1999.

Wang Towers, the company’s massive former headquarters, still stands on Chelmsford Street in Lowell. The building is known today as Cross Point Towers and houses the offices of dozens of businesses.

Filed Under: Community Tagged With: An Wang, Computer Pioneer, Dr An Wang, history, IBM, Lowell, magnetic core memory, Tewksbury, The Wang Theatre, Wang Institute of Graduate Studies, Wang Laboratories

Beyond Skin Deep

March 30, 2019 by Emilie-Noelle Provost Leave a Comment

— Sponsored —

Solace Wellness Center & MedSpa

This beautiful Tewksbury spa offers guests a peaceful sanctuary from their everyday cares and innovative products and services that can help them soothe their stresses, rid their bodies of toxins and bring their best selves to light.

If you asked most people what they think a med spa is like, a sterile office staffed by lab coat-clad clinicians wielding Botox needles might come to mind. After all, many med spas focus exclusively on the cosmetic products and procedures they offer, such as dermal fillers and chemical peels. But Dr. James Wu, a Board-certified oral and maxillofacial surgeon and Diplomate of the American Academy of Aesthetic Medicine who holds a certification in plant-based nutrition from Cornell University, and who is also a lifestyle and weight management coach, had a different vision when he opened Solace Wellness Center & MedSpa in Tewksbury in February 2018.

The first thing you notice when you walk into Solace is the overwhelming sense of calm. The space is large, airy and beautifully designed, the staff genuinely friendly, giving you the feeling that they really do care about how your day is going. 

All of this, according to Wu, is by design.

“If someone is to feel truly well, they need to feel good about themselves; they need to manage their stress,” Wu says. “Our concept at Solace is to blend physical and emotional wellness to help people be at their best.”

Photo by Adrien Bisson.

Wu has incorporated concepts of prevention and health promotion from Chinese and Ayurvedic medicine into Solace’s treatment offerings. “There are important components of our overall health, like our emotional and spiritual wellbeing, that are not easily measured by Western methods,” Wu says. “I believe there is validity to those things even if we can’t explain them. That’s why
I wanted Solace to be a wellness center, not just a spa.”

Wu says he first became interested in non-Western health concepts several years ago when he was a therapeutic massage client. After a few sessions, Wu, who also maintains a surgical practice, noticed an improvement in his ability to work on his feet all day, every day. He had more energy and felt better in general. “I felt like massage would help me lengthen my career,” Wu says.

Solace’s model also stems in part from Wu’s research on the effects of chronic inflammation on our bodies and how, according to some studies, it can cause a range of serious health problems such as heart disease, stroke, type II diabetes, certain cancers, gum disease and premature aging.

“I read two books that really influenced my thinking,”
Wu says. “One was ‘The Inflammation Syndrome’ by Jack Challem, which talks about how many diseases that are common today are tied to chronic inflammation. The other was ‘The China Study’
[by T. Colin Campbell and Thomas M. Campbell II], which talks about a long-term study of nutrition in China, and basically how people living in urban areas with a more Westernized diet have higher rates of cancer and heart disease than people living in rural areas who eat a plant-based diet.”

Because the skin is the body’s largest organ and is constantly exposed to the elements, Wu says that one of the most common ways that inflammation-causing toxins enter the body is through the skin.

To help address this, Solace offers a variety of skincare offerings which include several types of organic facials that, among other things, aim to rid the skin of toxins and improve its texture and brightness. 

Solace also offers guests the use of three far infrared saunas. 

Used for decades in Scandinavia, saunas can help stimulate blood flow and improve circulation, treat muscle and joint pain, help the body rid itself of toxins such as heavy metals, and also help to melt away your daily stress. 

L-r: Dr. Wu; Janice Wu; Fabiola Harrington; Rebecca Moy. Photo by Adrien Bisson.

“The far infrared wavelength penetrates the skin and heats the body from the inside out, rather than from the outside in, like most saunas,” Wu says. “This can help the body eliminate impurities and even help decrease high blood pressure and improve heart health.”

Another cause of chronic inflammation is poor diet. “There are a lot of things we can control and do from a nutritional standpoint to stay healthy,” Wu says. 

All Solace’s core team members are trained in lifestyle and weight management coaching. Guests interested in doing so can take advantage of this added benefit that Solace offers. “We’re not there to yell at people and tell them what they’re doing is wrong,” Wu says. “Our goal is to provide advice and encouragement, fresh ideas that people can adapt to their own lifestyle.”

According to Wu, many of Solace’s clients come in because they are interested in improving the way they look. “Most of our guests are in their 40s, 50s and 60s,” Wu says. “They tell us they want to look a little fresher, maybe five or 10 years younger.”

The spa offers a number of what Wu calls “advanced treatments,” things like Botox and Xeomin injections that can help reduce fine lines and wrinkles on the face, and advanced facials, such as the IPL Skin Rejuvenation and Photofacial, which uses light therapy to smooth your skin while treating facial veins, skin discoloration and age spots. 

To insure the best results and to protect their clients’ safety, Solace uses skin care products in its facials that have been certified organic by the European Union standard called COSMOS EcoCert. “The FDA doesn’t regulate cosmeceuticals. The E.U. does,” Wu says.

One of Wu’s goals is to develop personal relationships with Solace’s clients. Because it’s Solace’s business to help people improve themselves in areas that can feel quite personal, Wu wants the spa’s guests to feel comfortable at Solace, to think of the spa as a respite from their everyday lives. “First and foremost, we want our guests to get to know us and trust us,” Wu says.

One of the ways Solace is making this happen is by offering spa and wellness packages that make it easier, and often more cost effective, for guests to take advantage of the spa’s facilities and services. These range from the “Refresh Package,” which includes unlimited use of Solace’s saunas and relaxation areas, 12 facials and discounts on products, to the “Ultimate Solace Lifestyle Package,” which includes multiple benefits chosen from Solace’s Advanced Treatments menu like DermaFrac Micro-channeling Facials, IPL Hair Removal and Xeomin for elimination of facials lines and wrinkles. 

For people interested in seeing what Solace has to offer but might feel hesitant to call because they aren’t sure what types of services they want or need, Solace offers first-time guests a reasonably priced introductory service that includes skin analysis, a customized facial and a visit to the far infrared sauna. As an extra bonus for the telephone-shy, appointments can be booked right on Solace’s website.

“Our main goal is to help improve our guests’ quality of life,” Wu says. “If we can affect one or two things in a positive direction, sometimes that’s enough to encourage people to make other healthy changes.”   

Solace Wellness Center & MedSpa
Tewksbury, Mass.
(978) 851-8600
FoundSolace.com

Filed Under: Health & Wellness Tagged With: MA, massage, refresh, relaxation, skin care, Solace Wellness Center & MedSpa, spa, Tewksbury, Wellness

Red Moon Rising: Tewksbury’s Luna Rossa Renovates While Staying True to its Roots

April 10, 2018 by Dean Johnson Leave a Comment

When David DiCenso, owner of the popular Tewksbury Italian eatery Luna Rossa, decided it was time to spruce up his 21-year-old business,
he didn’t fool around.

DiCenso took a look and decided that, not just his restaurant, but the entire Keri Plaza location could use a facelift.

“We were looking to leave,” he admitted. “I was looking for a possible new location. It got to the point where every day I’d get out of my car,” DiCenso said, “and I’d say to myself, ‘I hate this place. It’s so ugly and so dated.’”

But instead of moving, he decided to do something about it. He bought the whole darned thing last summer.

Photos by Kevin Harkins.

With all that space, DiCenso could now expand Luna Rossa. For starters, he took over a onetime tropical fish store next door and converted it into a function room replete with its own bar that can accommodate up to 100 people for meetings, anniversaries and weddings. It also serves as overflow space on busy nights.

Major renovations were completed at the end of November.

Longtime customers will notice more subtle changes in Luna Rossa’s main dining room. Though the basic footprint is the same, the vestibule has been moved to the right and a glassed-in front area now features high-topped tables. There is new paint with soft earth tones, new flooring, better lighting, and renovated and enlarged bathrooms.

Even the large mural that once dominated one of Luna Rossa’s walls is gone. It was of a time, and that time is now gone. But DiCenso made sure a miniature black-and-white version hangs in a hallway.

The end result is a new Luna Rossa with a more inviting ambiance and modern feel.

What hasn’t changed, though, is DiCenso’s commitment to classic Italian cuisine. He can’t help it. It’s in his DNA. His family has a long history tied to quality local Italian restaurants with names like Davio’s and Donatella’s.

One relative with that pedigree, his uncle Nino, has been Luna Rossa’s head chef for two years. You have to ask yourself: What serious fan of Italian cuisine could pass up any eatery that has, literally, an Uncle Nino in the kitchen overseeing everything?

All the breads, sausages, and pastas are made in-house. Nino wouldn’t have it any other way. Though most entrees hover around $20, daily specials can go a little richer and include the likes of veal chops, baked stuffed lobster, and duck.

Ask DiCenso what a first-time customer should sample, and his response is immediate. Stick to basics, he advises: Bolognese, gnocchi, or even the porcini-crusted sirloin.

 

DiCenso has seen a lot of changes since Luna Rossa opened its doors over two decades ago. “With the Food Network and celebrity chef shows, people are into trying new things. We’ll have tripe and pork belly on the menu, for example,” he said. “We couldn’t have done that in the early days.

“Also, there is way more competition. So we’ve definitely had to step up our game and try to get better every day, even if it’s the little things.”

Or even if it’s the big things … like buying a whole stinkin’ plaza.

 

 


Luna Rossa
Tewksbury/Andover, Mass.
(978) 851-9282
LunaRossa-Restaurant.com

Filed Under: Community, Food & Drink Tagged With: luna rossa, MA, renovation, Restaurant, Tewksbury, update

  • 1
  • 2
  • Next Page »

Current Issue

Who We Are

mvm is the region’s premier source of information about regional arts, culture and entertainment; food, dining and drink; community happenings, history and the people who live, work, play and make our area great.

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter

Sections

  • Arts & Entertainment
  • Bridal
  • Community
  • Education
  • Fashion
  • Food & Drink
  • Health & Wellness
  • Home & Garden
  • MVMA
  • Perspectives
  • Travel

Links

  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
  • About Us
  • Regular Contributors
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Contact

© Copyright 2021 Merrimack Valley Media Group Inc. All rights reserved.

Orangetheory Fitness Chelmsford @DrumHill / (978) 577-5901

Orangetheory Fitness Methuen @The Loop / (978) 620-5850

Orangetheory Fitness Chelmsford @DrumHill / (978) 577-5901

Orangetheory Fitness Methuen @The Loop / (978) 620-5850

*Valid on new memberships during the month of September 2020.

 

Newsletter Signup

MERRIMACK VALLEY TODAY: Noteworthy. Local. News. (Launching May 2021)
Wellness Wednesdays
Eight Great Things To Do This Weekend (Thursdays)
NoteWorthy - Happenings, Movers & Shakers (Sundays)

Orangetheory Methuen is celebrating it’s one year anniversary with an
Open House, Saturday June 22 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Join your friends and neighbors to learn more about the fastest growing workout sensation in the nation. Tour the studio. Meet the coaches. Enter to win a 10 pack of classes. The first 20 people who sign up for a free class at the event will receive a free bonus class, no obligation. 

Click here to learn more! 

Click here to schedule your FREE CLASS in Chelmsford @DrumHill / (978) 577-5901
Click here to schedule your FREE CLASS in Methuen @The Loop / (978) 620-5850

*Free Class for first-time visitors and local residents only.