Date: Fri 23-Jul-1999
Date: Fri 23-Jul-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: CURT
Quick Words:
edink-Fairfield-Hills
Full Text:
ED INK: The Fine Print Of The Fairfield Hills Plans
Details of the three development proposals for Fairfield Hills that were
submitted last week proved to be hard to come by for some local officials.
There is only one copy of each of the three proposals on view locally at the
library. First Selectman Herb Rosenthal even found himself without his set of
proposals when he had to surrender them to the town consultant studying the
economic and environmental impact of the three plans. The plans outlined in
these documents, however, have the potential to fundamentally change the
character of Newtown in the next century; they should be made available to as
many people as possible, not just the select few directly involved in
Fairfield Hills planning projects.
With that in mind, starting this week and continuing for the next two weeks,
The Bee will describe at length the fine print in those plans for our readers.
We start this week with the plan submitted by Becker and Becker Associates of
New Canaan. Next week, we will focus on SBC Associates of Greenwich, and on
August 6 we will conclude with a review of plans by Wilder Balter Partners of
Elmsford, N.Y.
While all three of the proposals purport to offer a "mixed use" of the
property and buildings at Fairfield Hills, the prime motivation for each plan
is the development of hundreds of housing units, from assisted living
apartments for senior citizens to upscale townhouses. The proposals are
different enough to offer a good choice of options for the Fairfield Hills
Selection Committee, but in one sense they offer only one option: full
development of Fairfield Hills in the near future.
Two of the three development plans involve the demolition of most of the
buildings at Fairfield Hills and the construction of whole new neighborhoods
of homes in various configurations.
One of the firms, SBC, intends to spend more than $100 million developing the
site in the next few years. Another, Becker and Becker, has tried to win the
town over to its plan by preserving the Fairfield Hills campus as it is, and
by reserving significant space for town uses, including a school for grades
five and six in Cochran House (see related story). Becker and Becker even made
the rounds of local interest groups and modified their plan in response to
what they heard. (Two more buildings -- Yale Laboratory and Bridgeport Hall --
were added to the three already slated for town uses after The Bee expressed
reservations about foreclosing town options for facilities at Fairfield Hills
in future years.) We give them full credit for listening.
There is one other alternative for Fairfield Hills, however, that remains the
most attractive from our perspective: the town purchase of the property. Aside
from providing the town all the land facilities it will ever need for public
purposes, this option frees a key 186-acre property in the heart of town from
the trend we see virtually everywhere else in town: more homes, more people,
more traffic. It is a trend that is already putting strains on the town and
the quality of life here.
In the end we will have to choose. Do we want intense development at the heart
of Newtown, or do we want some breathing room?