ERA Key Woburn office adds realtor
Courtesy of ERA Key Realty Services
ERA Key Realty Services announced that Julian Wai Yan Kan, of Braintree, has joined ERA Key as a realtor in the Woburn office.
Kan, who speaks English, Japanese, Cantonese and Mandarin, was previously a self-employed creative consultant working for various industries. She worked as a digital designer for Wellington Management, a Boston-based investment management company, a marketing and design manager for Japan Festival Boston and a web specialist for The MathWorks in Natick.
She has also provided translation services for other companies.
Kan earned a bachelor’s degree from UMass Dartmouth. She has volunteered as a web designer for PLANET Boston and Sustainable Harvest International in Boston. She is a member of the Boston Mycological Club.
Tara A. Kilgallen of
Framingham has joined ERA Key as a Realtor in the
Framingham office.
Kilgallen has 20 years of experience as a yoga instructor in Massachusetts and California, and is currently as instructor at Common Ground Yoga in
Framingham. She previously served as co-director of Yoga at Lumina Mind Body Studios - Longfellow Health Clubs in
Wayland and
She was also a yoga instructor at Bosse Sports in
Sudbury. Before that, she was the director of yoga and retail manager at Tushita Heaven in San Juan Capistrano, California.
She earned her bachelor’s degree from Lesley University in Cambridge and completed her real estate training at Freedom Trail Realty School in Cambridge.
Rentschler Biopharma SE, a global contract development and manufacturing organization for biopharmaceuticals, has appointed
Martin Kessler as CEO of Rentschler Biopharma Inc., the company’s wholly owned U.S. subsidiary, and as senior vice president transformation of Rentschler Biopharma SE.
Kessler brings more than 15 years of experience in pharmaceutical and biopharmaceutical operations and strategy. At Rentschler Biopharma, he will drive the transformation throughout the company as it grows strategically into new fields and technologies. In his role as head of the U.S. business, he will lead the ongoing expansion at the company’s Greater Boston area site, which includes expanding capabilities, capacity and talent.
Paul Brassil of
Medfield has joined the company as senior vice president/chief information officer and will oversee PCU’s information technology and digital innovation efforts.
Brassil has more than 25 years of experience in the information technology leadership field with entities such as Commonwealth Medicine (a division of UMass Medical School), the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, EMC Corp. and Siemens IT Solutions and Services Inc.
He holds an MS in computer information systems from Bentley University in
Waltham and a BA in Business Administration from Bridgewater State University.
Brassil s community involvement spans initiatives focused on workforce development and industry leadership serving as a member of the Tech Hire Advisory Group of Boston’s Private Industry Council (comprised of Boston CIOs developing summer intern programs for low/moderate income students in the Boston Public Schools); an adviser for Fintech Women (helping women in banking/finance/fintech a
Milford s historic and oddly-shaped Spite House now for rent
Editor s note: Due to an editing error, a previous version of this story provided an incorrect figure for the size of the lot.
MILFORD When attorney Warren Heller owned the curious-looking building on the corner of Exchange and Congress streets, he had to outfit the entire interior with custom furniture.
“There were no square or rectangular walls,” he said. “Every one had some unique shape.”
Built in 1899, the so-called Spite House at 61 Exchange St. had nine rooms, only one of which contained four corners. The window frames were handmade to fit the curves of the walls, Heller said. The three-story building comprises 2,462 square feet but sits on a lot measuring just 0.028 acres (about 1,220 square feet).