Room to organize by age group
Multiple classrooms, meeting rooms, and larger assembly areas create a path for infant/toddler, preschool, pre-K, school-age, administrative, enrichment, and support functions to be planned separately.
Early education buyer brief | Medford, Massachusetts
A rare institutional-scale candidate for a preschool, childcare, school-age program, or education operator seeking classrooms, gathering space, food-service infrastructure, dedicated parking, and direct access to dense family demand near Tufts, the Green Line, Boston, and Cambridge.
Operator Fit
Growth in the Medford, Cambridge, and Somerville corridor is usually constrained by small storefront footprints, limited outdoor options, difficult drop-off circulation, expensive interior buildouts, and neighborhood parking pressure. 100 and 101 Winthrop give an operator a different starting point: an existing institutional building with program rooms already distributed across multiple levels and a separate parking parcel across the street.
Multiple classrooms, meeting rooms, and larger assembly areas create a path for infant/toddler, preschool, pre-K, school-age, administrative, enrichment, and support functions to be planned separately.
101 Winthrop gives the operator control over a dedicated parking parcel, supporting staff parking, parent drop-off planning, vendor access, and special-event overflow.
Kitchen areas, a lower-level fellowship hall, and large-room capacity can support meal service, staff training, family events, after-school programming, and indoor gross-motor use.
The site sits in a residential neighborhood near Tufts, Medford Square, the Green Line, I-93, and the Cambridge/Somerville employment corridor.
Property Specs
The offering should be evaluated as a two-parcel education conversion candidate: 100 Winthrop provides the building program, while 101 Winthrop provides dedicated operating support through parking and potential outdoor-use planning.
| Address | 100 & 101 Winthrop St, Medford, MA 02155 |
|---|---|
| Building size | Approx. 14,874 sq ft per FY2026 assessor record; buyer to verify |
| Year built | Current structure reportedly built circa 1950 after a fire; buyer to verify |
| Current use | Religious / institutional |
| Lot sizes | 100 Winthrop: 14,874 sq ft | 101 Winthrop: 0.20 acres |
| Zoning | 100 Winthrop: GR | 101 Winthrop: SF2 |
| Parking | Approx. 20+ surface spaces across dedicated parking parcel; buyer to verify count and layout |
| Transit | Walkable to Medford/Tufts Green Line station; verify route and timing |
| Offered at | $2,950,000 |
| Records | 100 Winthrop property record | 101 Winthrop property record |
Education Program Strategy
This is not a finished childcare center. It is a conversion candidate with the bones early education operators often struggle to assemble: separate rooms, large assembly areas, kitchen support, circulation, and controlled parking. Final capacity, room assignments, code path, outdoor-space strategy, and EEC licensing are buyer diligence items.
Nursery / early learning
Existing rooms can be studied for nursery, preschool, pre-K, therapy, enrichment, or small-group uses depending on licensing, egress, plumbing, restrooms, and required room dimensions.
Multipurpose hall
The lower-level hall can be studied as a flexible support zone for indoor gross-motor activity, family programming, lunch, staff training, and after-school use.
Food service
Kitchen and prep areas create a stronger starting point for meal service, snacks, staff support, and event operations than a conventional office or retail shell.
Outdoor planning
101 Winthrop should be studied for the best mix of staff parking, parent logistics, secure outdoor play, and operational circulation. Any outdoor play configuration requires buyer review of licensing, fencing, access, traffic, and municipal rules.
Virtual renderings are conceptual only and are provided to help visualize possible use of the spaces. They are not approved plans, construction documents, capacity studies, or representations of completed improvements.
Floor Plans
The floor plans show why the building deserves a closer test fit: large rooms, smaller classrooms, circulation zones, kitchens, offices, restrooms, and support areas already exist in one building envelope.
Current Condition + Potential
The current photos show the real condition and room types. Potential images are virtually staged to suggest one possible direction for early education, childcare, or school-age programming.
Shows how a bright upper-level room could read as a softer childcare or early learning environment.
Shows one possible layout for preschool, enrichment, tutoring, or small-group programming.
Illustrates a classroom configuration with activity tables, storage, and age-appropriate seating.
Shows how the lower-level hall could support dining, indoor play, parent events, and after-school programming.
Shows a cleaner, organized food-service direction for snacks, meals, staff support, and events.
Location
The property sits in a residential Medford neighborhood with proximity to major employment, university, transit, and commuter corridors. For operators, that means a potential customer base of families who need reliable daily access, predictable drop-off, and extended-day support.
Near the Tufts campus and surrounding faculty, staff, graduate student, and family demand.
Walkable to Medford/Tufts station, connecting the site to Somerville, Cambridge, and Boston.
Embedded in a dense neighborhood where family-oriented services can become part of daily routine.
Convenient to I-93 and the broader inner-core Boston employment corridor.
Diligence
A serious operator should confirm capacity and feasibility through professional diligence before relying on any use plan. The opportunity is the starting point; the licensing, code, traffic, outdoor-space, and construction details determine the final business case.
Massachusetts law generally limits municipalities from prohibiting or requiring a special permit for land or structures used for child care facilities, subject to reasonable local regulations. Buyer counsel should verify how that applies here.
Final child count, age mix, staff ratios, room assignments, toilet access, egress, and outdoor requirements must be reviewed with licensing and code professionals.
Buyer should evaluate life safety, sprinklers, accessibility, mechanical systems, kitchen compliance, playground requirements, circulation, and any required renovations.
Contact
For preschool, childcare, school-age, and education operators, the next step is a focused walkthrough with your licensing, facilities, and real estate decision makers.