Date: Fri 22-May-1998
Date: Fri 22-May-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
Fairfield-Hills-Nuclo
Full Text:
State Seeks Public Comment On Fairfield Hills
BY ANDREW GOROSKO
Newtown residents will be asked to comment on the preliminary findings
stemming from a state study of possible future uses for the Fairfield Hills
campus at an informational meeting Thursday, May 28, at 7:30 pm, in the
Newtown Middle School auditorium, 11 Queen Street.
Richard Nuclo, director of assets management for the state Office of Policy
and Management (OPM), says the firm, hired by the state to study possible uses
for the land and buildings, has prepared its preliminary findings. The purpose
of the meeting is to solicit public comments on the findings.
The public won't have the opportunity to review the redevelopmental outline
before the meeting. The study has been developed by Arthur Andersen
Consulting.
The continuing Andersen study is the latest chapter the long-running planning
process on the redevelopment of Fairfield Hills stretching back to the early
1990s.
In 1994, the Fairfield Hills Task Force, an ad hoc group charged with charting
possible future uses for the sprawling campus, reported back to the state
government on its findings. In brief, the task force recommended that open
space at Fairfield Hills be preserved, recreational uses be expanded, some
existing buildings be reused for general administrative office space, economic
development be encouraged in existing buildings, a regional educational
presence on campus be encouraged, and that affordable housing and housing for
the elderly be provided, among other uses.
In 1990, Lozano, White and Associates, Inc, a design group, prepared a master
plan for future uses of Fairfield Hills.
Preliminary findings in the Andersen study aren't expected to contain any big
surprises, according to Mr Nuclo.
The findings are compatible with the Fairfield Hills Task Force
recommendations, which layed out a plan to keep much of the Fairfield Hills
property as open space.
The preliminary findings won't unveil a single grand plan for the campus, but
rather will present a range of seven options, including land uses which have
been discussed in the past.
A major piece of the Fairfield Hills land-use puzzle fell into place recently
with the town's acceptance of the deed and record map for a 22.6-acre parcel
and two buildings at Fairfield Hills.
The property contains Watertown Hall, which served as a 32,348-square-foot
Fairfield Hills workers' dormitory, and a 7,316-square-foot multi-bay garage.
The land lies on either side of Old Farm Road, to the northwest of Mile Hill
Road's intersection with Mile Hill Road South. The property also contains
athletic fields used for youth sports.
The transfer of the land and buildings by the state to the town represents a
portion of the 1991 settlement of the lawsuit that the town filed against the
state over the state's construction of Garner Correctional Institution, the
state's high-security prison which houses more than 700 men on Nunnawauk Road.
The sprawling Fairfield Hills property, which now covers about 600 acres,
contains approximately 1.65 million square feet of enclosed space. It formerly
served as a state mental hospital.
The town and the state have been discussing the terms of a lease agreement
which would have the state provide a long-term, low-interest lease to the town
for 37.5 acres at Fairfield Hills for future industrial development. That
property is adjacent to the joint town-state sewage treatment plant and the
existing industrial park at Commerce Road.
In preparation for a possible state sale of 150 or more acres at Fairfield
Hills, the Planning and Zoning Commission (P&Z) has rezoned property there
from residential to redevelopment, industrial, land conservation, and
agricultural.