Soft opening for town’s new pharmacy

KENT — The Kent Apothecary moved last week to a new location, in the former train station.

It has also changed its name to the Kent Station Pharmacy. The grand opening was Monday, Oct. 26.

The apple didn’t fall far from the tree for the former train station: Before the pharmacy moved here, the building had served most recently as a doctor’s office.

Shelves were still being assembled and renovations were still going on as customers came into the shop to welcome and congratulate pharmacist and pharmacy owner Peter D’Aprile.

The space didn’t require a gut renovation, D’Aprile said, but some nips and tucks were needed. Eventually the new shop will have the same quaint old-fashioned charm as the previous store, at the corner of Main Street and Maple Street.  

The renovation work went smoothly. The biggest problem they’ve had so far in the new space, he said, is computer glitches.

Once everything and everyone has settled into their role at the new location, he said he would like to have a grand opening with champagne — sometime before Thanksgiving, depending on how everything goes.

D’Aprile said he purchased the 1800s former train station for $785,000.

Kent Station Pharmacy is now at 38 North Main St. and is  open Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., on Saturdays from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., and on Sundays from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.

For more information, call 860-927-3725 or go to www.kentstationpharmacy.com.

Latest News

Angela Derrick Carabine

SHARON — Angela Derrick Carabine, 74, died May 17, 2025, at Vasser Hospital in Poughkeepsie, New York. She was the wife of Michael Carabine and mother of Caitlin Carabine McLean.

A funeral Mass will be celebrated on June 6 at 11:00 a.m. at Saint Katri (St Bernards Church) Church. Burial will follow at St. Bernards Cemetery. A complete obituary can be found on the website of the Kenny Funeral home kennyfuneralhomes.com.

Revisiting ‘The Killing Fields’ with Sam Waterston

Sam Waterston

Jennifer Almquist

On June 7 at 3 p.m., the Triplex Cinema in Great Barrington will host a benefit screening of “The Killing Fields,” Roland Joffé’s 1984 drama about the Khmer Rouge and the two journalists, Cambodian Dith Pran and New York Times correspondent Sydney Schanberg, whose story carried the weight of a nation’s tragedy.

The film, which earned three Academy Awards and seven nominations — including one for Best Actor for Sam Waterston — will be followed by a rare conversation between Waterston and his longtime collaborator and acclaimed television and theater director Matthew Penn.

Keep ReadingShow less
The art of place: maps by Scott Reinhard

Scott Reinhard, graphic designer, cartographer, former Graphics Editor at the New York Times, took time out from setting up his show “Here, Here, Here, Here- Maps as Art” to explain his process of working.Here he explains one of the “Heres”, the Hunt Library’s location on earth (the orange dot below his hand).

obin Roraback

Map lovers know that as well as providing the vital functions of location and guidance, maps can also be works of art.With an exhibition titled “Here, Here, Here, Here — Maps as Art,” Scott Reinhard, graphic designer and cartographer, shows this to be true. The exhibition opens on June 7 at the David M. Hunt Library at 63 Main St., Falls Village, and will be the first solo exhibition for Reinhard.

Reinhard explained how he came to be a mapmaker. “Mapping as a part of my career was somewhat unexpected.I took an introduction to geographic information systems (GIS), the technological side of mapmaking, when I was in graduate school for graphic design at North Carolina State.GIS opened up a whole new world, new tools, and data as a medium to play with.”

Keep ReadingShow less