Date: Fri 07-Aug-1998
Date: Fri 07-Aug-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
Fairfield-Hills-Selection
Full Text:
Fairfield Hills Selection Panel Starts Its Work
BY ANDREW GOROSKO
The eight members of the Fairfield Hills Selection Committee have met for the
first time, setting ground rules on how the joint town-state agency will
function in the coming months as it sifts through various private proposals
for future use of the Fairfield Hills property.
Four town members and four state members met for four hours July 30 at the
state's Office of Policy and Management (OPM) in Hartford to discuss the
state's efforts to sell the 185-acre "core campus" of Fairfield Hills, said
Richard Nuclo, OPM's director of assets management.
Representing the town on the selection committee are First Selectman Herb
Rosenthal, State Representative Julia Wasserman, and residents Michael Osborne
and Charles Wrinn. Mr Osborne heads the Pootatuck Land Company which owns the
Pootatuck Fish and Game Club, a property adjacent to Fairfield Hills. Mr
Osborne also is a member of the town's Planning and Zoning Commission (P&Z).
Mr Wrinn is a member of the board of directors of the Housatonic Valley
Economic Development Partnership.
Mr Nuclo, plus other OPM and state Department of Public Works (DPW) officials,
represent the state on the panel.
"I think it was a very productive meeting," Mr Nuclo said. Basic discussion
topics included how the state should market Fairfield Hills to a single buyer
for the redevelopment of the former mental hospital; the criteria by which
redevelopment proposals will be judged; and how the selection committee will
function, Mr Nuclo said.
Arthur Andersen, LLP, of Hartford, the consultant retained by the OPM to study
Fairfield Hills' potential new uses, 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.
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.
Fairfield Hills, a state mental institution which was built to house 3,500
patients, declined in patient population from the late 1950s until its closure
in December 1995 under the state Department of Mental Health's (DMH) policy of
patient "deinstitutionalization."
Mr Nuclo said the selection committee plans to develop a brochure on the
availability of Fairfield Hills for private redevelopment.
"This is a fairly complicated issue," Mr Nuclo said of the state selling the
185-acre parcel and the many buildings which enclose about one million square
feet of space at Fairfield Hills.
Mr Nuclo said the state definitely wants to sell the 185 acres and buildings
to one developer at one time. However, the property might be privately
redeveloped in stages, he said.
Mrs Wasserman said that in seeking a firm to redevelop Fairfield Hills, the
state initially will send "requests for qualifications" to firms on a list now
being developed by Arthur Andersen. After the qualifications statements are
received, the state would then seek "requests for proposals" from developers.
From among the proposals received, the selection committee will choose the
"best" proposal for redevelopment based on the selection criteria now being
formulated by the selection committee.
After interested, qualified firms are found, the state will provide a tour or
tours of Fairfield Hills to provide a clear sense of what exists there, Mrs
Wasserman said.
Mrs Wasserman said she prefers that Fairfield Hills be redeveloped as a
mixed-use site, including some educational institution, housing for the
elderly, a research facility, commercial uses, and perhaps a conference
center.
During the next six months much will happen to shape the future uses of
Fairfield Hills, she said.
The findings of the Fairfield Hills Task Force are the basis for Arthur
Andersen's report on Fairfield Hills. In 1994, the ad hoc task force presented
a report to the state legislature with potential new uses for Fairfield Hills.
In proposing possible new uses for the property, Arthur Andersen has sought to
avoid excessive levels of land use and also to 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 the reuse of 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.
The consultant's suggestions involve a mixture of partial demolition,
rehabilitation, and new construction.
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 provide for the use of the existing
buildings and campus at Fairfield Hills to the greatest extent possible.
In assessing the advantages and disadvantages of the Newtown site, 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 are 1 million square feet of existing space;
environmental problems on the site need to be addressed, including asbestos
removal which 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.
Under state law, the state must provide the town with "first refusal rights"
in a sale of Fairfield Hills, meaning the town will be formally offered the
property before it is offered to any private firm.
While some local officials see the town's possible acquisition of Fairfield
Hills as a golden opportunity to obtain the geographic center of town, others
caution that acquiring the land and buildings would burden the town with the
same problems now faced by the state in marketing the property.