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The Campanelli Brothers built 15,000+ ranches across MA from 1947 to the late 1970s.
Photo: User: Imerss · Wikimedia Commons · CC BY-SA

What is a Campanelli ranch?

After World War II, Brockton brothers Nicholas and Alfred Campanelli, with brothers Joseph, Michael, and Anthony, grew their father’s business into one of Massachusetts’s largest homebuilders, putting up between 15,000 and 30,000 houses from 1947 into the late 1970s. New FHA and VA mortgages let them offer young families an affordable first home. Most are single-story Mid-Century Modern ranches, clustered first around Brockton and Framingham, then out to Chelmsford, Peabody, Sudbury, and Newton. They ran every step from land to appliances, so their houses feel consistent street to street.

A Campanelli L-shaped ranch in Brockton, c. 1958
A Campanelli L-shaped ranch in Brockton, c. 1958 Photo: Library of Congress · Wikimedia Commons · Public Domain

The models

Campanelli sold named models, each a step up in size and trim, so a model name in a listing is a strong sign of the real thing. The Highlander (1947 to early 1950s) was the founding model, a small L-shaped slab ranch with radiant heat and a central brick chimney. The Monterey (mid-1950s) added a brick lower wall, bay window, scalloped ceiling, and birch cabinets. The Eldorado added an attached garage and big front windows; the Hampton (late 1950s to mid-1960s) was roomier, with an inset entry. The Bedlington (early-to-mid 1960s) was a smaller two-bedroom plan. The Hawthorne (late 1960s into the 1970s) was the big late family model, four bedrooms and two and a half baths, found mostly in West Peabody.

What makes a Campanelli special

Most sit slab-on-grade with hot-water heat cast into the floor, so there is no basement and no baseboards, and floors stay warm in winter. Early models put a brick hearth between kitchen and living room; raised versions frame the stair with a chimney mass. Around Peabody and Framingham, owners have pushed them into U-shapes, raised them, and added sunrooms or solar, often swapping radiant heat for mini-splits.

The classic Campanelli L-shaped floor plan
The classic Campanelli L-shaped floor plan Photo: Unique Homes MA (recreation from original Campanelli advertisement) · All rights reserved

Is it the real thing?

A few tells point to a true Campanelli: the long L-shaped one-story plan, a low roof with shallow eaves, a big picture window, the entry tucked into the inside corner of the L, and a carport or garage off the kitchen end. A washing machine in the kitchen is a slab-house habit, since moving plumbing is expensive. Most sit on curving, tree-lined cul-de-sacs.

They have aged well. Thousands still stand, and in 2025 the Boston Globe profiled a Hingham Campanelli that listed near $1M. Some enclaves are earning historic recognition, like the Ralph I. Williams-designed homes in West Newton, where houses on the former Albemarle Golf Club now sell for well over $1M.

A postwar Campanelli subdivision with curving streets and uniform ranch setbacks
A postwar Campanelli subdivision with curving streets and uniform ranch setbacks Photo: Derek Jensen (Tysto) · Wikimedia Commons · Public domain

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Current listings (101)

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National Historic Landmark

Federally designated as nationally significant — the highest U.S. historic recognition. Section 106 review applies to federal undertakings affecting the property.

National Register

Listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Owners may qualify for the 20% federal Historic Rehabilitation Tax Credit on certified rehabilitation work.

State Register

Listed on the Massachusetts State Register of Historic Places.

Local Historic District

Inside a Local Historic District. Exterior changes visible from a public way require approval from the local historic district commission.

Local Landmark

Individually designated by the town as a local landmark. Exterior alterations require commission approval.

MACRIS Inventory

Documented in MACRIS, the state historic inventory. Informational only — no regulatory constraints.

Article 85 (Boston)

Subject to Boston Article 85 demolition-delay review, which can pause demolition of buildings 50+ years old for up to 90 days.