About Dr. Linda A. Simon, DDS
Concord isn’t short on dental offices, but orthodontics tends to carve its own niche—less about routine cleanings, more about the long game of alignment and bite correction. Up on Church Street North, near the stretch where professional buildings cluster, you’ll find a practice that focuses solely on that: braces, retainers, and the kind of incremental adjustments that eventually mean fewer self-conscious smiles in school photos. It’s not the sort of place you’d pop into on impulse; orthodontic work is a commitment, and the address—845 Church St N # 301—sits in a part of town where that kind of patience feels built into the rhythm.
The building itself is unassuming, a multi-unit professional space where the real distinction lies in what happens behind the doors. Orthodontics, by nature, deals in precision: wire tensions, molar rotations, the slow coaxing of teeth into cooperation. That’s the domain here—no whitening strips or cavity fills, just the methodical work of shifting what’s already there. For parents, it’s often a rite of passage; for adults, it’s a quiet rebellion against the idea that straight teeth have an expiration date. Either way, the process starts with a consultation, not a sales pitch.
Booking that first appointment—or the twentieth—means a call to (704) 784-3611, where the voice on the other end is likely accustomed to fielding questions about Invisalign timelines or the logistics of eating with new brackets. There’s an efficiency to orthodontic offices that general dentistry sometimes lacks; the goals are clearer, the metrics more tangible. A millimeter of movement might not sound like much, but over months, it adds up to the kind of change that alters how someone carries themselves. That’s the quiet work happening in suite 301.
If you’re mapping it out, the directions place the office just north of the intersection with Branchview, where the traffic thins and the sidewalks feel a little wider. It’s the kind of location that’s easier to find when you’re actually looking for it—no neon signs, no billboards, just a steady stream of patients who’ve learned that the best results rarely announce themselves loudly.
This listing was last updated on April 20, 2026