March 6, 2026

CT Construction Digest Friday March 6, 2026

New Haven’s Union Square redevelopment plan to be showcased in public hearing

Harriet Jones

New Haven residents will have a chance to comment on the first phase of a massive plan to revitalize the Union Square area at a City Plan Commission meeting Thursday.

The plan includes renovating the Robert T. Wolfe Apartments, the former Church Street South Housing Project, and surrounding community into high-quality mixed income housing.

The plan also includes 40,000 to 50,000 square feet of retail and commercial space.

Construction includes a new multi-level, mixed-use development on the site of the former residential development, in the section located across from Union Station.

Phase One will include approximately 541 residential units and approximately 31,000 square feet of retail and commercial space, consisting of three buildings and two parking lots. The entire plan envisages around 2,500 residential units.

The city says current Robert T. Wolfe residents and former Church Street South residents will be offered the option to return to the area as the project comes online. Around 40% of the units in the redevelopment will be offered at below market rents.

The latest version of the plan is the result of more than two years of community meetings, task forces and survey input from the neighborhood. The total cost for the multi-year revitalization project has been estimated at more than $2 billion.

The city has said it intends to apply for a federal Department of Housing and Urban Development Choice Neighborhood Implementation Grant worth up to $26 million to help it complete phase one.

The plan includes measures to calm traffic in the area, improve public spaces, and encourage retail, food, services and activities that support community life.


State Regulators Approve Gravel Pit Solar Expansion In East Windsor

Jay Kenney,

EAST WINDSOR, CT — State regulators voted Thursday to approve a modification that clears the way for an expansion of Gravel Pit Solar in East Windsor, advancing a plan that would add up to 30 megawatts of additional capacity to the existing facility.

The Connecticut Siting Council voted 6–0 to approve the draft findings of fact, draft opinion, and draft decision and order for Docket 492A during its March 5 meeting, with council member Michael Lynch recusing himself from the vote.

The action approves the written decision documents and authorizes issuance of a modified certificate for the project, which was originally approved as a 120-megawatt solar facility on multiple parcels in East Windsor.

Vote Clears Expansion Plan Forward

Council members reviewed the documents, which were dated Feb. 27, before taking the final vote. During the discussion, council member Michael Carter asked for an update on the status of an ISO New England large generator interconnection agreement referenced in the findings, but staff said they did not have an update.

During the council’s review of the draft opinion, council member Patricia Hall requested language clarifying that any final landscaping plan required to reduce visual impacts would include ongoing maintenance. Staff indicated the change would be incorporated into the final documents.

Expansion Would Add Up To 30 Megawatts

Under the modified plan, Gravel Pit Solar would expand onto additional adjacent parcels in East Windsor and add new solar arrays in four non-contiguous areas, with output limited to no more than 30 megawatts delivered to the grid.

The expansion proposal identifies 15 additional parcels, with an approximately 150-acre facility expansion site within a larger project area spanning hundreds of acres.

Most Infrastructure Already In Place, State Says

The project would use the existing Gravel Pit Solar substation and the Eversource switchyard, and the plan does not call for new transmission interconnections or new transmission structures to serve the expansion.

The draft opinion describes an expansion that would include tens of thousands of solar panels installed on fixed racking, along with inverters, fencing and new gravel access drives serving the four array areas.

Town Orders Addressed

The ruling also addresses municipal “regulate and restrict” orders submitted by the East Windsor Planning and Zoning Commission. The council’s draft opinion states that local zoning regulations do not apply to facilities under the council’s exclusive jurisdiction, and the council granted Gravel Pit Solar’s appeals of the town’s orders under state law.

Environmental conditions were included in the approval.

The draft opinion includes conditions aimed at reducing impacts, including requirements tied to visual screening and siting decisions in areas where the project could be visible from local roads.

It also outlines wildlife and habitat considerations near Ketch Brook and describes additional requirements focused on a high-quality vernal pool area near one of the proposed array areas, including directing the developer to consider reducing or eliminating panels in that area to the extent feasible.

The project’s operational plans would be filed in a required management plan.

As part of the approval, Gravel Pit Solar must submit a Development and Management Plan that includes finalized designs and project plans, such as a final site plan, erosion and sediment control measures, and other construction details.

The draft opinion also references proposed operational measures, including emergency response training, post-construction noise verification and long-term vegetation management that could include sheep grazing in some areas.


Danbury I-84 rush hour shoulder lane plan aims to put ‘time back in the hands’ of drivers

Rob Ryser

DANBURY — Transportation experts will update residents Thursday about the state’s latest thinking to “quickly” address Interstate 84’s design flaws by building rush hour travel lanes on the inside shoulders of the highway between Danbury Fair mall and Exit 7.

“The flex lane is designed to be constructed quickly and efficiently on the existing roadway, which means fewer disruptions and faster improvements to traffic flow,” the state Department of Transportation says about the first-of-its-kind project in Connecticut, expected to cost $250 million.

The word “quickly” is a relative term for the DOT, at least when it comes to fixing a 10-mile stretch of I-84 in Danbury that the DOT says “has historically been one of the most congested roadway segments in the region.”

By “quickly,” the DOT means the construction of the state’s first rush hour shoulder lane could be complete by the “early 2030’s,” the DOT says.

“The shoulder on the median side would be repurposed into a temporary travel lane during the busiest times to maintain traffic flow and keep travelers moving. The project also includes the addition of a travel lane on Route 7 in the southbound direction approaching the I-84 westbound merge at Exit 7,” the DOT says in a news release about Thursday’s public information meeting. “By making better use of the existing I-84 footprint, the flex lane would create a more reliable and efficient experience for everyone.”

The DOT’s focus on informing the public about the shoulder lane on Thursday, beginning with an open house at 5:30 p.m., followed by a presentation at St. Joseph Church Hall, 376 Main St., does not mean the state has forgotten its grand plans to reconstruct I-84.

The state’s larger plans, which could cost $5 billion and aren’t expected to be complete until the mid-2040s, are in the beginning stages of an extensive environmental review. The next steps after that include design, permitting, right-of-way acquisitions and budgeting.

Meanwhile, Danbury, as a city, and greater Danbury, as a region, continue to be among the fastest-growing places in the state, which is only expected to increase I-84 traffic.

“Population growth in Danbury through 2040 is projected to increase by over 14%, the highest projected growth rate in western Connecticut,” says a 2025 DOT report. “Continued population growth in the region will exacerbate congestion and mobility issues. Traffic forecasts for 2040 indicate that peak average daily traffic volumes will increase to 130,000 vehicles per day (approximately 18%) on I-84 between Interchanges 3 and 7.”

All the more need to find solutions that will not take a generation to build, the DOT says.

The special shoulder lane, which could begin construction in the summer of 2028, would be closed to trucks and typically only be open during the morning and afternoon rush hours. Digital signs over the lane would indicate when the lane was open, and a solid yellow line would separate the shoulder lane from the other travel lanes.

Residents who cannot attend the in-person meeting on Thursday night are invited to attend a video-conference meeting at noon on March 10. Residents must register to attend via Zoom. 

“The flex lane would reduce the potential for bottlenecks and sudden slowdowns that can lead to crashes by improving how all vehicles flow through the corridor,” the DOT says.