September 30, 2025

CT Construction Digest Tuesday September 30, 2025

Enfield OKs zone change for former MassMutual site redevelopment with apartments, condo complex

Joseph Villanova

ENFIELD — Officials have approved a zone change that could pave the way for 464 housing units on the former MassMutual site.

Branford-based MB Financial Group plans to reuse the office campus at 85 and 100 Bright Meadow Blvd., last occupied by insurance company MassMutual, as a primarily residential development with some commercial space. The 65-acre project site currently features three vacant offices, an unused parking garage, two large uncovered parking lots, and an active daycare..

MassMutual closed its Enfield offices in 2021, later moving over the border to Springfield, Mass. A New York-based developer proposed the "All Sports Village" sports and entertainment complex to town officials in early 2023, securing some town approvals in 2024 but ultimately fizzling out. 

MB Financial Group purchased the properties for $4 million in May of this year and submitted a zone change application for the two properties in September.

The Planning and Zoning Commission unanimously approved at its Thursday meeting a zone change to the recently established Special Development District, designed by the town for projects like MB Financial Group's plans and the Enfield Square Mall redevelopment.  

A narrative included with the zone change application states that the developer plans to file a master plan "in the very near future" following approval of the new zone.

Carl Landolina, an attorney with Fahey & Landolina representing the developer, said Thursday that the developer intends to file applications for a site plan and subdivision before the end of this year, and construction could begin next year under an aggressive timeline.

Representatives for the developer presented plans for the site at the Thursday meeting, describing 178 rental units in the three existing office buildings, 157 condos to be built on the large parking lots, and the potential construction of a new five-story apartment building with 129 units.

The daycare and parking garage would remain on site and later support the rest of the development. Other planned site work includes the demolition of one-story structures attached to the office buildings, described by the developer as "appendages" used for backend operations.

The apartments and condos would have separate amenities, including various recreational facilities, as well as 12,000 square feet of commercial space broadly intended for food and beverage sales.

Members of the PZC who commented on the plan were largely positive and town staff outlined items in Enfield's Plan of Conservation and Development that the application aligns with, including a specific mention of seeking reuse of the MassMutual campus.

A public hearing attracted comments from three residents who disapproved of the application, with some voicing concerns over the design and density, and one arguing that the site should instead be used for medical facilities.

Landolina said large, vacant offices like the MassMutual campus "don't seem to have any use" other than residential or mixed-use developments in the post-COVID-19 pandemic landscape, where remote and hybrid work schedules are commonplace.

Eric Zuena, founding principal of ZDS Architecture, said Thursday that the developer sees the MassMutual campus as "a wonderful opportunity" to revive a well-kept but vacant property and add housing stock to Enfield and the broader Connecticut market.

Zuena said the first proposed phase would be the adaptive reuse of the existing office buildings, and the townhouses would come after. He said construction of the planned new apartment building would be based on market demand, though the developer hopes the other units will be quickly absorbed.

Landolina said any businesses in the commercial space would be open to the public, but planned amenities like pools and a fitness center would be for condo owners and apartment tenants only.


Ridgefield voters rejected a new $85.6M public safety building. Will they vote yes on the revise?

Shaniece Holmes-Brown

RIDGEFIELD — Ridgefield officials are preparing for their second attempt to get the construction of a new public safety building approved.

First Selectperson Rudy Marconi said low voter turnout and tax impact concerns are the top reasons why it is "very, very difficult" to get the proposed public safety project passed.

"This has been a long time coming, and we're ready to cross the finish line. I hope the voters support it," he said.

A referendum on the project will be on the ballot in November, though one such vote on the initiative already failed earlier this year.

Marconi said the project failed in February's referendum vote, when it had initially cost $85.6 million. He said due to public feedback, the project is now $8 million cheaper. The changes included taking out a concrete garage, reducing the square footage and reducing the cost of the site work.

The $77.4 million building at 36 Old Quarry Road is designed to house both police and fire crews due to their dilapidated stations.

Marconi said both the police station and the fire station are more than 100 years old. According to the project's website, the last renovation made to the police station, which used to be a private home, was in 1975 and the last update to the fire station was in 1965. 

"For the fire department, the men have one shower. And the NFPA, which is the National Fire Protection Association, with technology and more studies about cancer, they advise that you must shower within an hour when you're in the middle of a fire with smoke," Marconi said. "With one shower that's impossible. So, that's just one example of how our buildings really have outlasted their useful life."

Marconi said the town hasn't had a lot of major projects in its history, with the latest being the $134 million for the schools in the early 2000s. Some of the major parts of the project were the construction of Scotts Ridge Middle School, upgrades to East Ridge Middle School and constructing a new recreation center.

He said the project was completed in 2004 and the years that followed have been spent paying it off.

"We said we weren't going to do any other major projects until we paid off the debt on that substantial project 20 plus years ago," Marconi said. "And 2024 marked the final payment for all the work we did with the schools."

He said once the payments finished, he was ready to focus on the public safety building.


US DOT promotion of ‘vehicular travel’ hits popular CT greenway trail hard. What it lost.

Josie Reich 

Progress on a multimillion-dollar Connecticut bike trail is in jeopardy after the U.S. Department of Transportation pulled a grant it had awarded for the project.

Earlier this month, the Trump administration cancelled funding for at least six biking and walking trails across the country, including a $5.7 million grant slated for Connecticut’s Naugatuck River Greenway Trail, or the NRG Trail.

In a letter dated Sept. 9, Maria Lefevre, executive director for the office of the under secretary of transportation, said the administration is prioritizing “projects that promote vehicular travel.” The U.S. Transportation Department rereviewed the grant individually, the letter stated, and withdrew funding because the project “no longer aligns with DOT priorities.”

The letter was addressed to Rick Dunne, executive director of Naugatuck Valley Council of Governments, or NVCOG. Reached for comment Monday, Dunne stressed that the NRG Trail would not be built over any motorized routes, and that it would be used for transportation in addition to recreation.

“We were looking forward to being able to work with the administration on it… but they defined their goals for multi-modalism as funding vehicular access,” Dunne said.

Officials with the U.S. Transportation Department did not respond to a request for comment in time for publication.

The grant was funded through former President Joe Biden’s $1 trillion infrastructure bill and the NRG Trail was selected for funding in June 2024.

The NRG Trail would connect 11 towns in the Naugatuck River Valley. The planned route snakes along the river for 44 miles, bridging towns from Litchfield to Waterbury to Derby.

The trail has been in the works for almost three decades, and the pulled federal grant would have helped close the remaining gaps. It would have funded segments of the trail totaling roughly 16.5 miles.

Progress on those parts of the trail — in Thomaston, Watertown, Waterbury and Naugatuck — will halt until NVCOG can secure alternate funding.

Naugatuck has agreed to fund its section of the trail, according to Dunne. NVCOG intends to find replacement funding to complete the full project.

Since taking office, President Donald J. Trump has made efforts to revoke many grants across government departments. It’s an unusual strategy, particularly with respect to already funded projects, such as walking and biking trails.

Dunne said that colleagues in similar positions in other states have contacted him to join a lawsuit against the federal government over the canceled grants. Albuquerque Mayor Tim Keller stated his intention to sue earlier this month.

Those affected by the lost funding include consultants involved in designing the trail and the communities the route passes through, who may lose out on economic opportunities, said Bruce Donald, Southern New England manager for East Coast Greenway Alliance, a group developing a trail network from Maine to Florida.

“This is fairly new territory,” Donald said. “Usually when money is awarded, you get it and you use it.”

Scott Goldstein, senior director of government relations at Rails to Trails Conservancy, a nonprofit that supports trail network development, said it’s difficult to keep track of the grants that have been revoked because the Trump administration is sending letters directly to communities, rather than making public announcements.

“These cancellations are happening in the shadows,” he said.


How 190-foot poles and power lines have turned into one of CT's biggest controversies

Ken Dixon

FAIRFIELD — There’s a big difference between the historic million-dollar homes and gardens of the Southport section of town and the lower-income row houses and brick former factories of downtown Bridgeport 7.3 miles away.

But 40 property owners in both communities could face massive changes in their lives if a proposed $300 million transmission line is approved next month by a little-known state agency. The plan would allow United Illuminating to erect 102 steel towers along the Metro-North rail line ranging in height from 95 to 195 feet, carrying a new 115,000-volt power line to the utility’s Congress Street substation downtown.

It’s part of a bigger 25-mile plan to bring the high-voltage line from the Westport-Fairfield border and Bridgeport, linking sections through Stratford and West Haven with 500 new galvanized steel towers, then finally east to New Haven. UI is a subsidiary of Avangrid, a division of Spain-based Iberdrola.

Concerns vary along the potentially affected area, many worried the gigantic power lines and poles will destroy the character of the community. There are also concerns about environmental disruption and limitations on economic development.

Some neighbors along the rail corridor worry that parts of their properties, including homes, offices, churches, historic sites and businesses, would be seized and partially demolished using the controversial eminent domain law to obtain 40-foot rights of way along the south side of the tracks. They’re calling for state regulators to force UI/Avangrid to put the 115-kilovolt lines underground or make them remain on the catenary power lines above the tracks that power train operations.

The issue has mobilized state lawmakers in both Fairfield and Bridgeport, and even Gov. Ned Lamont, who has made five appointments on the nine-member Connecticut Siting Council, which recently postponed action on the proposal until at least Oct. 16.

“The Siting Council did not receive sufficient evidence or testimony to determine the cost of alternative options,” said state Rep. Steve Stafstrom, D-Bridgeport, co-chairman of the legislative Judiciary Committee. “That’s why this process was fundamentally flawed and needs to be redone. UI wants to take more than 19 acres of developable land off the corridor, which affects economic development.”

Sarah Wall Fliotsos, a UI spokeswoman, said Friday the company looks forward to the Siting Council’s final decision in October.

“As with any of our projects, we routinely meet with our customers and elected officials to discuss the details of plans and proposals,” she said of the project’s two-and-a-half-year process. “Our goal is always to find ways to balance the interests of the communities we serve while working to serve the public interest of the state and New England region: reining in costs that are borne by 3.7 million Connecticut residents, and investing in the transmission system to ensure safe, reliable power for the next several decades.”

Rob Blanchard, Lamont’s director of communications, said Friday the governor is working on potential compromises.

“We’re continuing to engage with all shareholders, with the goal toward an alternative path,” said Blanchard, a Fairfield resident who is a member of the Representative Town Meeting.

Nonagenarian was shocked

Jacquelyn Thunfors, a spry 97, said she could literally envision part of her tree-shaded, colonial-era home being demolished if the plan were to go through. The house abuts the train tracks on Pequot Road in Southport within the 40-foot right of way the utility wants. A painter and retired newspaper reporter, Thunfors, like several people interviewed, said she had not received a notice of UI’s intentions and only incidentally heard about the plans from neighbors in August 2023.

“It was like a moment from outer space, really,” Thunfors recalled in the cozy living room of her red clapboard house — one of the oldest in Fairfield  —  with later Greek Revival-style additions that she bought about 40 years ago. “You don’t expect the reality of something like that. I still haven’t accepted it. It’s just incredible to me that anybody can impose eminent domain, take away your property and plop a big pole in your backyard. It was a very shocking kind of thing.”

The use of eminent domain is not guaranteed on this project and UI has stated it would negotiate in good faith as it seeks to move forward with the project, if approved.

Outside, sitting in a garden chair on the property that predates both the railroad and nearby Interstate 95, Thunfors said she believes new calculations are needed on the cost of taking properties in the Southport historic district and east into Bridgeport. The tower, called a monopole, that would be erected on a reinforced base on her property would be 125 feet high, according to the UI plan that includes possibly taking some of her house and the shady maple trees that screen Thunfors' back porch from the tracks. She shows an artist’s rendition of the aftermath of a UI takeover, demolition and construction.

Thunfors' neighbor, David Scott Parker, an architect and historian, said allowing a foreign-owned utility to take private property makes a mockery of the public-benefits goals of eminent domain by allowing UI/Avangrid to create an “energy toll road” to eventually transmit power to other states.

“The whole idea of this was local distribution, not profit for multinational companies,” said Parker, who could lose half of the mustard-colored, 19th-century house he uses for his office. “UI admitted in the hearings there was no need in their distribution area for the next five years or next 10 years.” 

Differences on cost of burying lines

UI has budgeted $30 million for acquiring the estimated 19.3 acres along the 7.3 miles, but Fairfield officials believe the actual values of properties could be three to five times as much. The utility estimates it would cost $840 million to $1 billion estimate to bury the transmission lines underground, although property owners have been critical of those estimates, suggesting they are inflated. Similar burials of lines cost between $23 million and $33 million per mile, citing state estimates and similar projects in Connecticut and New York.

Avangrid executives say burying the cables through Fairfield and Bridgeport would be paid by Connecticut rate payers, and if it were borne by Fairfield and Bridgeport, that would add as much as $80 per month to consumer bills in those communities.

Allan Drury, a spokesman for New York utility giant Con Edison, said he was not familiar with UI/Avangrid’s projects.

“But if you are trying to estimate the cost of those projects based on the cost of any Con Edison under-grounding projects, the comparison just doesn’t work,” he wrote in an email. “Our undergrounding is for local distribution lines, not transmission. Big difference. Furthermore, the costs of under-grounding projects vary greatly from area to area, depending on numerous factors. They can even vary significantly within a single utility’s service area.”

Tricia Taskey Modifica, external communications and media relations manager for Eversource, said the company’s underground work in recent years also cannot be compared to UI’s proposal.

“The Greenwich line and substation project was an upgrade that involved enhancements to the existing Cos Cob substation, construction of a new substation on Railroad Avenue, and new 115-kilovolt underground electric transmission lines connecting them, and was completed in 2021,” Modifica said in an email. “The total project cost, not just for undergrounding, was approximately $131 million. We’re not able to provide the cost breakdown of the various components of the project.”

Modifica said an underground project in Stamford, similar to a Hartford project replacing 55-year-old underground transmission lines, is “very different than the overhead project UI is proposing. We do not have a cost/mile number for the Stamford project. We have an estimate for the entire Stamford project of approximately $239 million.”

Tom Swan, longtime executive director of the pro-consumer Connecticut Citizen Action Group who has tracked state utilities for decades, calls the power-tower proposal “outrageous,” but typical of the state’s adversarial electric monopolies.

“If I was a resident, I would be very concerned with their track record of bullying to get their way,” Swan said in a phone interview.

Budding arts community threatened

A few miles to the east, on Bridgeport’s Railroad Avenue, Michael Villani — co-owner of the former women’s underwear factory space that was vacant for decades, then cleaned up and converted four years ago into the Metro Arts Studios — stood in the street and pointed at the 20 feet or so that could be torn away from the front of his building. With more than 200 artists on a waiting list for space in the fully occupied, light-filled studios, Villani said he sees the UI/Avangrid plan as a serious threat to an attempted revival of the city’s South End.

“I think it’s a land grab,” Villani said. “There is something fundamentally wrong here and it could put a stake in the heart of the Bridgeport arts community.

“It’ll be about 20 feet in on an angle,” he noted of the impact to the building over the low drone of nearby I-95 traffic.

He recalled that acquaintances first alerted him to the UI proposal in the fall of 2023.

“It was big news, evidently, in Fairfield and Southport, so I jumped on it and did what I had to do,” Villani said.

He recalled in recent months that consultants opened the UI service manholes on the sidewalk and assessed space under the street. They told him informally there’s plenty of room under the street to bury the 115-kV line.

“They were honest and they know stuff,” Villani said, pulling up the UI proposal on his phone. “They were here for about a week. They told me it was empty and it’s deep.”

Villani reiterated the battle cry of neighbors who share the proximity of the train tracks despite geography and demographics.

“I don’t get how a foreign entity can take our property, seize our property,” he said as a Metro-North commuter train rolled by about 20 feet up on the elevated track. “No one is answering that question. And not only seize private property, but church property. It’s outrageous that we even have to put up with this crap. It’s freezing all the investment and Bridgeport is trying hard to bring people in. We have people coming here saying I never knew Bridgeport had something this beautiful.”