McKee Square Rite Aid sold, staying put

The building that houses Rite-Aid in the South End has been sold, but the store isn’t going anywhere, said the new owner.

The building that houses Rite-Aid in the South End has been sold, but the store isn’t going anywhere, said the new owner. GEOFF FORESTER / Monitor staff

By CATHERINE McLAUGHLIN

Monitor staff

Published: 04-18-2025 1:56 PM

The McKee Square property that has long been home to a Rite Aid was purchased by a Concord-area optometrist for $1.7 million at the end of last month.

The new owner, through an LLC, is Hooksett resident Tyler Weber. Weber declined to comment on the sale, but said in an email to the Monitor that the Rite-Aid isn’t going anywhere.

Previously owned by a trust out of Florida in the name of A. Leonard Seeche, 92 South Street was put on the market after the trustee passed away, according to Scott Walker, a broker on the purchase. The property had been in Seeche’s name since at least 1980, though the Rite Aid building dates back to 1964, according to city property records.

Rite Aid has shuttered hundreds of its pharmacies nationwide over the last year or so as part of bankruptcy proceedings: Two in Concord, this one at McKee Square and on North State Street, survived those closures, but a third, at the Fort Eddy Plaza, did not.

Catherine McLaughlin can be reached at cmclaughlin@cmonitor.com. You can subscribe to her Concord newsletter The City Beat at concordmonitor.com.

Yesterday's Most Read Articles

‘I thought we had some more time’ – Coping with the murder-suicide of a young Pembroke mother and son
Owners of Lewis Farm prepare to bring back agritourism after long dispute with city of Concord
Historic Tilton Island Park Bridge will be reopened unless Trump takes back a federal grant
Five former Concord Crush girls at St. Paul’s are soon to leave the nest to play NCAA Women’s Lacrosse
As Canadian travel to the U.S. falls, North Country businesses are eyeing this Victoria Day weekend to predict impacts in New Hampshire
‘Folks who use it should pay for it’ — City manager proposes clubhouse plan with smaller tax impact