© 2024 Coastal Chimney Sweeps, MA. All right reserved | Sitemap | Privacy Policy
Lynnfield, Massachusetts
Lynnfield Town Hall
Lynnfield’s Town Hall serves as the civic nerve center for public records, permitting, and municipal administration. Its continued use as a public building makes it a practical reference point for accessibility upgrades, envelope maintenance, and long-term stewardship planning.
Phone: 781-334-9400
Lynnfield Meeting House (1714)
This early New England meetinghouse anchors Lynnfield’s historic civic landscape and reflects the dual-purpose tradition of worship and town governance. For preservation teams, it’s a valuable case study in historic timber framing, exterior maintenance cycles, and sensitive repairs that protect original fabric.
Phone: 781-334-9400
Lynnfield Town Common
The Town Common is Lynnfield’s historic public green, shaping the town-center civic layout and walkability. Its setting supports community gatherings and provides a context for streetscape improvements, lighting, drainage, and preservation-compatible site work.
Phone: 781-334-9400
Lynnfield Common Historic District (Town Center)
This district represents the civic and architectural core of Lynnfield, where institutional buildings and historic streets define the town’s public realm. It’s especially relevant for planners and contractors evaluating historic-context design, masonry and carpentry repairs, and compatible exterior envelope work.
Phone: 781-334-9400
Historic Registry / Architectural Reference
Lynnfield Public Library
The public library is a key civic resource and community anchor, supporting education, public access, and local programming. Its civic function makes it a practical example for accessibility, life-safety upgrades, and durable exterior detailing.
Phone: 781-334-5411
Centre Congregational Church (Lynnfield Center)
As a long-standing institution in the town center, this church contributes to Lynnfield’s historic streetscape and civic identity. Its prominent presence and traditional building form provide a useful preservation context for masonry, fenestration, and roofline stewardship in a historic core.
Phone: 781-334-3050
Lynnfield Police Department
The police station is a core public-safety facility that supports day-to-day civic operations and emergency response. For municipal capital planning, it’s a reference point for secure public-facing design, resilience, and modern building-systems upgrades.
Phone: 781-334-3131
Lynnfield Fire Department Headquarters (Station 1)
This headquarters station is a critical municipal asset supporting emergency response, inspection coordination, and public-safety readiness. Its continuous civic use makes it relevant for durability planning, interior modernization, and site circulation improvements.
Phone: 781-334-5152
Lynnfield Department of Public Works (DPW)
The DPW facility supports core municipal services—roads, public infrastructure, and maintenance operations. For civic project teams, it’s a key point for coordinating right-of-way work, drainage, and public asset lifecycle planning.
Phone: 781-334-9500
Lynnfield Water District (District Office)
This public utility office supports water service administration and infrastructure coordination for residents and businesses. It’s a useful municipal reference point for civil coordination, facility resilience, and public-facing operational continuity.
Phone: 781-598-4223
Lynnfield Center Water District
This water district office supports a key public-works function within the town, managing utility operations and service reliability. It’s relevant for municipal coordination on hydrants, water-main work, and infrastructure planning tied to streetscape projects.
Phone: 781-334-3901
Lynnfield High School
The high school campus is a major civic facility where athletics, performances, and community events often take place. As a high-occupancy public building, it’s a strong example for long-term envelope upkeep, accessibility pathways, and capital-improvement planning.
Phone: 781-334-5820
Lynnfield Middle School
This campus hosts school programming and town gatherings, including large civic meetings and auditorium events. Its public use and assembly functions make it a practical reference point for interior upgrades, wayfinding, and building-systems modernization.
Phone: 781-334-5810
Huckleberry Hill Elementary School
This elementary school functions as a neighborhood civic anchor and contributes to Lynnfield’s public building network. For municipal facilities planning, it’s relevant to traffic circulation, site safety, and long-term envelope and accessibility maintenance.
Phone: 781-334-5835
Summer Street Elementary School
Serving as a key public education facility, this school supports everyday civic life and community continuity. Its public-facing role makes it a practical reference for safe pedestrian access, building durability, and coordinated site improvements.
Phone: 781-334-5830
Hart House (172 Chestnut Street)
This First Period house is a rare survivorship of early colonial construction in Lynnfield and is recognized for its architectural significance. It’s a useful reference for restoration teams studying historic framing logic, chimney massing, and preservation-sensitive exterior work.
Phone: 781-334-9400
Perkins, John Hiram House (276 Chestnut Street)
Associated with early settlement-era land history, this property is documented as part of Lynnfield’s historic building inventory. Its form and evolution provide a practical preservation reference for phased construction analysis and envelope stabilization planning.
Phone: 781-334-9400
Cook’s Farm (6 Cooks Farm Lane)
Cook’s Farm reflects Lynnfield’s agricultural-era development and the long continuity of rural land use in the region. For adaptive stewardship, it supports discussions around maintaining historic-scale outbuildings, landscape features, and compatible rehabilitation.
Phone: 781-334-9400
Tapley Tavern / Hayward, Nathaniel House (650 Lowell Street)
Known historically as a tavern-era property along an early travel corridor, this building connects Lynnfield’s built environment to regional transportation history. It’s especially useful for preservation work involving historic posts, early structural systems, and careful exterior rehabilitation.
Phone: 781-334-9400
Orne, John House (192 Main Street)
This documented historic residence contributes to the architectural rhythm of Lynnfield’s older streets and illustrates long-standing patterns of settlement and landholding. It’s a useful reference for historically compatible repairs to wood exteriors, trim profiles, and fenestration.
Phone: 781-334-9400
Wellman – Richardson, Moses House (244 Main Street)
This inventoried property represents Lynnfield’s early domestic building stock and layered additions over time. For restoration teams, it’s a practical study in diagnosing phased construction, stabilizing aging framing, and planning historically sensitive exterior repairs.
Phone: 781-334-9400
Flint, Capt. Thomas House (272 Main Street)
This substantial historic house is documented for its evolving form and period details that reflect mid-18th-century tastes and later changes. Its scale and roofline make it relevant for careful exterior envelope work, window casing replication, and long-term maintenance planning.
Phone: 781-334-9400
Henfield House (300 Main Street)
Named for a family long associated with the property, this house helps document Lynnfield’s early residential architecture and later alterations. It’s a useful reference for preservation planning focused on roof interventions, siding strategies, and compatible additions.
Phone: 781-334-9400
Mansfield – Gilman House (662 Salem Street)
This inventoried house reflects Lynnfield’s historic domestic architecture along Salem Street, a long-standing east–west corridor. For builders and preservation teams, it supports evaluation of foundations, framing continuity, and exterior envelope sequencing.
Phone: 781-334-9400
Mansfield, Dea. Daniel House (938 Salem Street)
Documented in Lynnfield’s historic inventory, this property reflects the town’s long residential continuity and period-era building practices. It’s a practical reference for preservation teams addressing chimney massing, historic openings, and careful exterior rehabilitation.
Phone: 781-334-9400
