Date: Fri 05-Jun-1998
Date: Fri 05-Jun-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
Fairfield-Hills
Full Text:
Consultants Sketch Out The Future Of Fairfield Hills
(with cut)
BY ANDREW GOROSKO
In a report on the envisioned sale of Fairfield Hills, a consulting firm is
recommending a variety of potential new uses for the sprawling state-owned
property in the center of town, formerly the site of a mental institution.
Arthur Andersen, LLP, of Hartford, the consultants retained by the state's
Office of Policy and Management (OPM), suggests that a 185-acre section of the
600-acre Fairfield Hills be sold by the state to some private firm. The
private developer would then redevelop the 185 acres based on a "mixed-use
scenario" master plan for the property.
"The variations on the mixed-use theme are endless and best left to the
creative energy of a master developer to present and support," according to
Andersen.
New uses suggested by Andersen for the 185 acres include: health care, office
space, retail sales, housing, educational facilities, a hotel, resort, spa,
conference center, golf course and recreational facilities.
In seven mixed-use redevelopment scenarios, Andersen proposes various
combinations of those land uses.
Forum
About 80 people attended an OPM-sponsored public forum May 28 on Andersen's
findings in its continuing study of the future uses of Fairfield Hills.
Andersen distributed a condensed version of its preliminary findings May 28. A
more detailed version of the study is available for public review at the
public library, town clerk's office, and first selectman's office.
First Selectman Herbert Rosenthal said it's encouraging that several dozen
people attended the forum to express their interest in the future of Fairfield
Hills.
Mr Rosenthal told audience members the town will have an equal voice with the
state in determining the eventual new uses of Fairfield Hills.
Richard Nuclo, OPM's director of assets management, said, "We will be partners
with the town. ... We will move forward together."
The findings of the Fairfield Hills Task Force are the basis for Andersen's
report on Fairfield Hills, Mr Nuclo said. In 1994, the ad hoc task force
presented a report to the state legislature with potential new uses for
Fairfield Hills.
Andersen Report
Mark Kitchen, a planner for Andersen, said that for a redevelopment of
Fairfield Hills to be successful, a single sale of the land redeveloped under
the terms of a master plan would be necessary.
"This is a very complicated property," he said.
Based on the size of the site, there's no single use of it, except for some
educational facility, which would make sense, he said.
"It's a wonderful property, but one with its problems," he said.
Larry Kenny, a consultant for Assets Management Solutions, a subcontractor on
the planning project for Andersen, said the Fairfield Hills property contains
environmentally suspect buildings that contain contaminants such as asbestos.
Mr Kenny said the best approach to locate a developer to redevelop Fairfield
Hills is through a "request for proposals" (RFP) marketing process.
The property will be nationally advertised as a redevelopment site, he said,
adding, "We're dealing with a fairly challenging site."
A selection committee whose membership will be equally appointed by the town
and state will cull through the various redevelopment proposals in choosing
the best new uses for the property, according to Mr Kenny.
It could take six to nine months before a viable redevelopment proposal for
the property is in the works, Mr Nuclo said.
Mixed-Use Scenarios
In proposing possible new uses for the property, Andersen sought to avoid
excessive levels of land use and also stay within the constraints of town
zoning regulations for the property. Also, Andersen kept in mind local
concerns about protecting the area's environmental quality.
In analyzing reusing the property, Andersen assumed the property's master
developer will rehabilitate buildings that fit into the redevelopment program
and demolish buildings that aren't needed, instead of protecting those
buildings.
The consultants suggest seven mixed-use scenarios all of which involve a
mixture of partial demolition, rehabilitation, and new construction. All the
seven mixed-use scenarios involve using 185 acres or almost one-third of the
acreage at the former mental hospital.
Possible uses include: a shopping center, elderly multi-family housing;
single-family housing; a hotel/conference center; an executive golf course;
corporate business park; educational facility; retail/commercial complex;
pitch-and-putt golf course; ice skating rink; wellness/fitness center;
technology research and development center; assisted living facilities; and an
age-restricted single-family housing complex.
Andersen's goal is to aid the state in finding a single purchaser for the
property.
In engineering a resale of the property, Andersen is seeking new uses of
Fairfield Hills which: have a minimal economic effect on local spending for
public education; have a low impact on the environment; create positive
economic effects on the town, and have the existing buildings and campus at
Fairfield Hills used to the greatest extent possible.
In assessing the advantages and disadvantages the Newtown site for the
redevelopment of Fairfield Hills, Andersen found advantageous: the property
has good access to Interstate 84; sanitary sewers are in place on the campus;
a public drinking water supply is available; the town is a stable community;
and the site has flexible zoning regulations.
Disadvantages of the Fairfield Hills site include: it is developed with many
single-purpose buildings; there's 1.65 million square feet of existing space;
cleaning up environmental problems on the site, including asbestos removal,
will be costly; some demolition work will be needed; and the property is
listed on the state's historic registry, placing some limits on the
flexibility of redevelopment.
In its analysis of Fairfield Hills' reuse potential, Andersen finds that the
complexity of the site requires that there be a flexible marketing approach,
and that the town and state cooperate, coming to a consensus to realize
mutually beneficial and timely redevelopment of the property.
Andersen identified the partial demolition and the mixed reuse of the property
as a more marketable approach to redeveloping the Fairfield Hills than either
the total demolition and single reuse of the site, or the partial demolition
and single reuse of the site.
Update
In 1995, the state legislature designated 250 acres at Fairfield Hills for
land conservation and agriculture. In the legislative session that just ended,
the legislature added another 50 acres for those purposes, bringing the total
to 300 acres.
The state recently transferred 22 acres, including Watertown Hall and a
multi-bay garage, to the town as part of a 1991 legal settlement of the town's
lawsuit against the state over the construction of Garner Correctional
Institution, a high-security prison on Nunnawauk Road.
The state legislature also has agreed to transfer another 22 acres of land
along Deep Brook to the town as an open space corridor for passive recreation
along that river.
Also, the town and the state are working out the details of the state
providing 37 acres to the town, under the terms of a long-term, low-cost lease
or sale agreement, for industrial development adjacent to the Commerce Road
industrial park.
The state also has transferred Fairfield Hills land to Newtown Housing for the
Elderly for past expansions of its Nunnawauk Meadows housing complex for the
elderly.
The state plans to sell seven existing houses and eight residential building
lots on the east side of Queen Street, as well as five existing houses on Mile
Hill Road South. The state plans to hire a real estate broker to sell the real
estate to private parties.
The state has offered to sell the seven houses and eight vacant lots along
Queen Street directly to the town before it offers that real estate to private
parties through a broker. Town officials are seeking public comments on the
town being offered the right of first refusal on the real estate. The property
would be sold at its fair market value.
The Merryhill Child Care Center of 49 Queen Street operates on state-owned
property there. Center director Therese Hychko May 28 asked Mr Nuclo what the
future holds for that child-care center.
Mr Nuclo said the state is willing to consider providing Merryhill with a
long-term lease, but would prefer selling the property to Merryhill.
Also, the private Addiction Prevention Therapy (APT) has had the use of
Greenwich House at Fairfield Hills for the past several years for its
substance abuse program. Although OPM has sought to have APT move to new
quarters, APT has resisted, saying the state hasn't offered it comparable
facilities elsewhere.
The full-length of the Fairfield Hills bypass road now under construction
should be passable to traffic by the end of this year. Final paving is
expected next spring.
The state Department of Transportation (DOT) is interested in building a road
salt storage shed on the Fairfield Hills campus.