Interior Painter
Sudbury MA

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Looking for an Interior Painter Sudbury MA?

Are you a Homeowner? Business Owner? Property Manager? Or maybe someone just looking for more information on the best interior painter Sudbury MA?

You’re in the right place…

DO YOU HAVE THESE PROBLEMS:

  • Paint Chipping?
  • Time for a color change?
  • New Home Or Apartment?

Idea Painting Company, a top-rated painter specializing in interior painting services,​ has helped thousands of Sudbury homeowners, business owners, property managers, and other individuals in the Greater Boston, MA area. After some research, we’re confident you’ll find us to be the right interior painter to handle your interior painting project.

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Why Choose

Idea Painting Company Is The Best Interior Painter in Sudbury MA?

In short…Because we have a reputation for quality work and being budget friendly.  Our customer service is second to none. Our team is always responsive, courteous, friendly, and respectful.

At Idea Painting Company, we do it all! From conception to completion, we handle every aspect of your painting or restoration project. This integrated approach reduces project time and money by streamlining each phase of implementation and eliminating the delays that often plague sub-contracted projects.

With Idea Painting Company, you’ll receive:

  • Quality workmanship that is guaranteed to last
  • Work from licensed professionals who are honest and hardworking
  • Dependable service that is completed on time and on budget
  • Free estimates and a fully insured crew

To review the creativity of our work and the quality of our craftsmanship, simply take a look at our Photo Gallery. Our decades worth of painting projects speak for themselves! From custom commercial projects to house painting, and more — You can trust your project or business property to our team of experts.

Residential & Commercial

Full Service Painting Company

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What Are The Benefits of Using Professional House Painters?

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Many people try to take a do-it-yourself approach to painting. However, hiring a professional helps you improve your space with a quality paint job.

When you need to upgrade your house, interior painting professionals come with benefits like:

  • Finishing the job on time. You don’t have to drag out your painting project for months, waiting for the right time. We will meet the timeline that works for you.
  • Attention to detail. No matter the surface, we cover every inch.
  • No mess. Professional painters clean up all messes, so you don’t have to.
  • Professional finish. You won’t see any blemishes, drips, or bumps in your paint job.

When you hire a professional, you can focus on other things while we provide interior painting services. We take care of everything, including set-up, moving furniture, and cleaning up.

Proper Preparation Is Key To A Beautiful Finish

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Maybe you’re painting your house interior to cover up worn paint or hide scratches. You may want to change the color to suit your style, or you plan to put your home up for sale. If you don’t know where to start, our expert team can help.

Idea Painting Company’s house interior painting process is straightforward from start to finish. Our house painters handle the logistics and keep you informed with every step.

Idea Painting Company takes an individualized approach to all of our jobs. Our process includes helping you select a paint color, covering the area, and prepping the surfaces.

We specialize in painting:

  • Bedrooms
  • Bathrooms
  • Kitchens
  • Hallways
  • Living rooms

Proper house interior painting lasts and makes a room feel brand new. Additionally, different areas require different finishes and nuance. We plan ahead to make sure we use the appropriate tools and finishes for your spaces.

What Makes Us Different?

Learn More About Us

FULLY INSURED

We’re fully insured and bonded to handle all requests.

budget Friendly

We’re willing to discuss projects constrained by a budget.

Quick Service

We show up on time and finish ahead of schedule regularly.

Friendly Team

Our crew is pleasant and easy to talk to on the job site.

We’ll Take Care of All Clean-Up and Respect Your Property

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We offer professional and efficient interior painting services. You deserve a high level of craftsmanship, knowledge, and courtesy while we do our job. 

Our crew communicates with you and answers any questions. We guarantee satisfaction because we know the importance of executing your vision. Painting can be messy, which is why we:

  • Carefully move and cover heavy furniture items
  • Use special protectors for your wood floors, vinyl, or carpet
  • Protect railings and countertops
  • Pre-clean woodwork before painting

If necessary, we remove any algae or cobb webs and fill in holes and cracks. Once we finish, we put all furniture back in its original position.

You can expect us to leave your space clean at the end of every workday. We remove all of our tools and trash before doing a final walkthrough to make sure everything meets our high standards.

Reliable Sudbury House Painters

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If you are searching for “interior painting near me,” look no further. We provide quality services, no matter the size of your project.

You don’t have to waste time and money buying paint and tools yourself. Our professionals come with everything we need for the job, and you can stay in your budget. We support you throughout the entire painting process.

Idea Painting Company has:

  • Excellent customer service
  • High-quality materials
  • Master painters
  • A commitment to local service

Our crew has years of experience painting and cleaning in Massachusetts. We always tell you what we’re doing and how long it will take. Leave the paint job to us and go about your business as usual.

We also offer ceiling painting, trim painting, and wallpaper removal. Call us today for interior painting services of all kinds and get a free quote on interior painting.

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Talk to an Expert

We understand that sometimes you just want to talk before scheduling a consultation. Our team will gladly answer any of your questions or help you with any of your concerns.

Call Elias now! — (855) 544-4335

PAINTER & FLOORING CONTRACTOR

Focused on Exceeding Expectations

Because we pay such attention to detail throughout each project, our painters can still finish on time. But just to ensure that every customer becomes a loyal customer, we don't get paid until the job is all done and you're completely satisfied with our work.

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MAP OF Sudbury, MA

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Sudbury OVERVIEW

Sudbury, Massachusetts
Town
Wayside Inn

Wayside Inn
Official seal of Sudbury, Massachusetts

Location in Middlesex County in Massachusetts

Location in Middlesex County in Massachusetts
Coordinates:

42°23′N 71°25′W / 42.383°N 71.417°W / 42.383; -71.417Coordinates: 42°23′N 71°25′W / 42.383°N 71.417°W / 42.383; -71.417

Country United States
State Massachusetts
County Middlesex
Settled 1638
Incorporated 1639
Government

 • Type Open town meeting
Area

 • Total 24.6 sq mi (63.8 km)
 • Land 24.4 sq mi (63.1 km2)
 • Water 0.3 sq mi (0.7 km)
Elevation

190 ft (58 m)
Population

 (2020)
 • Total 18,934
Time zone UTC−5 (Eastern)
 • Summer (DST) UTC−4 (Eastern)
ZIP Code
01776
Area code 351 / 978
FIPS code 25-68260
GNIS feature ID 0618237
Website sudbury.ma.us

Sudbury is a town in Middlesex County, Massachusetts, United States. At the 2020 census, it had a population of 18,934. The town, located in Greater Boston’s MetroWest region, has a rich colonial history.

History

Incorporated in 1639, the boundaries of Sudbury included (by 1653) what is now Wayland (which split off in 1780, initially as East Sudbury), and parts of present day Framingham, Marlborough, Stow and Maynard (the latter town splitting off in 1871). Nipmuc Indians lived in what is now Sudbury, including Tantamous, a medicine man, and his son Peter Jethro, who deeded a large parcel of land to Sudbury for settlement in 1684.

The original town center and meetinghouse were located near the Sudbury River at what is now known as Wayland’s North Cemetery. For the residents on the west side of the river, it was a treacherous passage in the winter and attendance at both worship services and Town Meetings was compulsory. In 1723 the West Parish meetinghouse was built west of the river at an area known as Rocky Plains (presently the Town Center). It served as a place for both worship and Town Meetings, After the split with Wayland, the new location grew to have houses, a school, and in 1846, a new Town House. Since then, the Sudbury Center Historic District has changed little.

Sudbury also contributed the most militia during King Philip’s War and was the site of the well-known attack on Sudbury. Ephraim Curtis was a successful leader of the militia of West Sudbury and would lend his name to the town’s junior high school.: 24–75  Sudbury militia participated in the Battle of Lexington and Concord, in 1775, where Sudbury members sniped on British Red Coats returning to Boston.

One of Sudbury’s historic landmarks, the Wayside Inn, claims to be the country’s oldest operating inn, built and run by the Howe family for many generations. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow wrote Tales of a Wayside Inn, a book of poems published in 1863. In the book, the poem The Landlord’s Tale was the source of the immortal phrase “listen my children and you shall hear, of the midnight ride of Paul Revere.” Henry Ford bought the inn in 1923, restored it and donated it to a charitable foundation which continues to run it as an operating inn to this day. Ford also built a boys’ school on the property, as well as a grist mill, and the Martha-Mary Chapel. He brought in the Redstone Schoolhouse from Sterling, which was reputed to be the school in Sarah Josepha Hale’s nursery rhyme Mary Had a Little Lamb. However, Giuseppi Cavicchio’s refusal to sell his water rights scuttled Henry Ford’s plans to build an auto parts factory at the site of Charles O. Parmenter’s mill in South Sudbury.

In August 1925, a Sudbury farm was the scene of a riot between local members of the Ku Klux Klan and Irish-American youths from the area. Five people were wounded by gunshots, and the State Police arrested over 100 Klansmen. Massachusetts officials cracked down on the group’s meetings thereafter, and the Klan died out in the area.

In the period after World War II, Sudbury experienced rapid growth in population and industry. Defense contractor Raytheon was a significant employer, operating a large research facility in Sudbury from 1958 until 2016. Another major employer in that period was Sperry Rand. In the 1970s, the town was home to many of the engineers working in the minicomputer revolution at Digital Equipment Corporation in nearby Maynard. Sudbury was also one of the largest carnation-growing towns, with many greenhouse operations.

From 1960–1969, Sudbury challenged and prevailed against a proposal by Boston Edison Company that would have installed overhead transmission lines through what is now Great Meadows National Wildlife Refuge. Ultimately, the line was instead buried under streets to Maynard.

Residentially, Sudbury’s 1-acre (4,000 m) zoning bylaws helped the town maintain a more rural character through the 1970s and 1980s when developments of single-family Colonials and large Capes established it as an affluent location. Economic growth was restricted to the town’s main thoroughfare, US Route 20. Significant tracts of open space—including much wetland—were preserved in the northern half of town and along the Hop Brook corridor flowing from the Wayside Inn Historic District in the southwest part of town through the King Philip Historic District (the site of a conflict in King Philip’s War) and into the Sudbury River at the southeast border with Wayland. A significant portion of the Assabet River National Wildlife Refuge (opened in 2005) is located in Sudbury.

Geography

According to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of 24.6 square miles (64 km), of which 24.4 square miles (63 km2) is land and 0.3 square miles (0.78 km), or 1.06%, is water. The highest point in Sudbury is on the north slope of Nobscot Hill, and the highest summit is Tippling Rock, which commands a great view of the west of Boston and the tops of the Hancock and Prudential buildings in downtown.

Sudbury is bordered by Wayland (the Sudbury River) on the east; Framingham on the south; Hudson, Maynard, Marlborough, and Stow on the west; Concord on the northeast; and Acton on the north. A larger town, Sudbury also shares a common corner with Lincoln, with which it shares a regional high school, Lincoln-Sudbury High School. Sudbury is 20 miles (32 km) west of Boston, 26 miles (42 km) east of Worcester, and 194 miles (312 km) from New York City.

In 1650 the town included Sudbury as well as most of Wayland and Maynard.

Adjacent towns

Sudbury is located in eastern Massachusetts, bordered by several towns:

Demographics

Historical population
Year Pop. ±%
1790 1,290 —    
1800 1,303 +1.0%
1810 1,287 −1.2%
1820 1,417 +10.1%
1830 1,423 +0.4%
1840 1,422 −0.1%
1850 1,578 +11.0%
1860 1,691 +7.2%
1870 2,091 +23.7%
1880 1,178 −43.7%
1890 1,197 +1.6%
1900 1,150 −3.9%
1910 1,120 −2.6%
1920 1,121 +0.1%
1930 1,182 +5.4%
1940 1,754 +48.4%
1950 2,596 +48.0%
1960 7,447 +186.9%
1970 13,506 +81.4%
1980 14,027 +3.9%
1990 14,358 +2.4%
2000 16,841 +17.3%
2010 17,659 +4.9%
2020 18,934 +7.2%
* population 1850–2010
Source: United States census records and Population Estimates Program data.
* population 1790–1840 Source: Map Of Massachusetts

As of the census of 2000, there were 16,841 people, 5,504 households, and 4,749 families residing in the town. The population density was 691.1 inhabitants per square mile (266.8/km2). There were 5,590 housing units at an average density of 229.4 per square mile (88.6/km). The racial makeup of the town was 94.23% White, 0.80% African American, 0.03% Native American, 3.72% Asian, 0.03% Pacific Islander, 0.23% from other races, and 0.96% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 1.24% of the population. An update in the town’s census recorded the population at 18,192 as of 6/10/2015.

There were 5,504 households, out of which 51.1% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 78.5% were married couples living together, 6.2% had a female householder with no husband present, and 13.7% were non-families. 11.0% of all households were made up of individuals, and 5.5% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 3.02 and the average family size was 3.28.

In the town, the population was spread out, with 32.5% under the age of 18, 3.2% from 18 to 24, 27.3% from 25 to 44, 27.2% from 45 to 64, and 9.8% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 39 years. For every 100 females, there were 95.4 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 92.3 males.

The median income for a household in the town was $151,041, and the median income for a family was $222,008. Males had a median income of $148,593 versus $47,500 for females. The per capita income for the town was $75,865. About 2.1% of families and 2.8% of the population were below the poverty line, including 3.9% of those under age 18 and 4.8% of those age 65 or over.

Government

State and federal government

On the federal level, Precincts 1A, 2, 3, 4, and 5 of Sudbury are part of Massachusetts’s 5th congressional district, represented by Katherine Clark. Precinct 1 is part of Massachusetts’s 3rd congressional district, represented by Lori Trahan. The state’s senior (Class I) member of the United States Senate is Elizabeth Warren. The junior (Class II) senator is Ed Markey.

Education

Sudbury students in kindergarten through eighth grade attend Sudbury Public Schools, with high school students attending schools in the Lincoln-Sudbury Regional School District, which was established in 1954, integrating the former Sudbury High School with that of the nearby town of Lincoln, Massachusetts. In 2011, Boston magazine ranked Sudbury’s school system 4th in the state, in both of its categories(classroom/academics & Testing/Achievement scores). In subsequent (as well as many prior) years, Sudbury is perennially ranked as a ‘Top 20’ Massachusetts school system.

In June 2002, the towns of Lincoln and Sudbury began a $74 million project to build a new high school near the site of the original building. The shared Lincoln-Sudbury Regional High School (LSRHS) is in Sudbury.

The high school’s science program student team won the 2006 National Ocean Sciences Bowl championship and came in second in 2005. LSRHS has a nationally recognized school newspaper and school yearbook, The Forum and DYAD, respectively.

There are four elementary schools in Sudbury and one middle school. The four elementary schools are:

  • Josiah Haynes Elementary School
  • Israel Loring Elementary School
  • General John Nixon Elementary School
  • Peter Noyes Elementary School

The middle school is:

  • Ephraim Curtis Middle School

Sudbury has two former elementary schools that were converted to other uses:

  • Fairbank Elementary School is now a community center, and the central office for the school district.
  • Horse Pond Elementary School is now a Massachusetts State Police Crime Laboratory.

Places of worship

  • First Parish of Sudbury. Gathered in 1640 east of the Sudbury River (present day Wayland). “East parish” (now First Parish of Wayland) remained and “West parish” moved to the present site, called Rocky Plains (now Sudbury town center), upon Rev. Israel Loring first preaching there May 6, 1722. The historic meeting house was built in 1797, replacing the original 1723 structure. First Parish became Unitarian in the local schism of 1837 and is now Unitarian Universalist.
  • First Baptist Church of Sudbury, Baptist
  • Congregation B’nai Torah, Jewish
  • Congregation Beth El of the Sudbury River Valley, Jewish
  • Chabad Center of Sudbury, Jewish
  • Memorial Congregational Church, member of the United Church of Christ. An Open and Affirming Congregation. Formed in the 1837 local schism at First Parish.
  • Our Lady of Fatima Parish, Roman Catholic
  • Presbyterian Church in Sudbury
  • Saint Elizabeth’s Episcopal Church
  • St. Anselm Rectorate, Roman Catholic
  • St. John Evangelical Lutheran Church
  • Sudbury United Methodist Church

Notable people

  • Horace Abbott, iron manufacturer
  • George Hunt Barton, geologist, arctic explorer, and college professor. Founding president of the Boston Children’s Museum
  • Edith Nason Buckingham, zoologist, dog breeder, chicken farmer
  • Sarah Cloyce, Salem witch trials survivor; relocated to Sudbury after permanently leaving Salem
  • Ralph Adams Cram, architect, resided in Sudbury on Concord Road and built his family a private chapel which is now owned and operated by Saint Elizabeth’s Episcopal Church
  • Coco Crisp, lived here during some of his time with the Boston Red Sox
  • Matthew B. J. Delaney, author
  • Dennis Eckersley, baseball Hall of Famer, lived on Morse Road before his years with the Boston Red Sox and on Plympton Road during and after his years with the Red Sox
  • Chris Evans, actor
  • Scott Evans, actor
  • Henry Ford, founder of the Ford Motor Company, lived in Sudbury during parts of the 1920s and 1930s
  • Mike Gordon, bassist for Phish
  • Robert L. Gordon III, Deputy Under Secretary of Defense
  • Michelle Gorgone, Olympic snowboarder
  • Edward Hallowell, psychiatrist, author, and specialist on ADD/ADHD
  • Eddie House, NBA champion with the Boston Celtics
  • Stephen Huneck, artist and writer
  • Tyler Jewell, Olympic snowboarder
  • Michael Kolowich, documentary filmmaker and technology entrepreneur
  • William K. Lietzau Director of the US Defense Counterintelligence and Security Agency
  • Tony Massarotti, sports reporter for The Boston Globe
  • John Nixon, General in the Continental Army during the American Revolution
  • Shaquille O’Neal, four-time NBA champion, 2000 NBA MVP, fifteen-time NBA All-Star, rapper, actor, and current Inside the NBA analyst lived in Sudbury for a brief time
  • Samuel Parris, Salem Witch Trials judge and Puritan minister, later preached in Wayland, which was then a part of Sudbury
  • Paula Poundstone, comedian, grew up in Sudbury
  • Edmund Rice, co-founder and early resident of the town from 1638–1656
  • Ashley Richardson (also known as Ashley Montana), model
  • Babe Ruth, baseball Hall of Famer. While with the Red Sox, he and his wife rented a small house next to Willis Pond, Sudbury, for the 1917–1918 off-season
  • Matt Savage, musician
  • Simon Shnapir, Olympic medalist pair skater
  • Fred Smerlas, five-time NFL Pro Bowler
  • Jarrod Shoemaker, Olympian and Triathlete
  • Jeremy Strong, actor and Emmy winner for his role on Succession
  • Callie Thorne, actress (Rescue Me)

See also

  • Greater Boston
  • MetroWest
  • Open town meeting

Notes

References

  • 1871 Atlas of Massachusetts. by Wall & Gray.Map of Massachusetts. Map of Middlesex County.
  • History of Middlesex County, Massachusetts, Volume 1 (A–H), Volume 2 (L–W) compiled by Samuel Adams Drake, published 1879 and 1880. 572 and 505 pages. Sudbury article by Rev. George A. Oviatt in volume 2 pages 357–381.

External links

  • Official website
  • Sudbury Chamber of Commerce
  • Sudbury Historical Society
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