June 8, 2026

CT Construction Digest Monday June 8, 2026

Quarry Walk developer looks to build village oasis in New Haven area with 400 units, shops, dining

Alexander Soule

After carving out a village oasis from scratch amid the Oxford woods, a developer is moving ahead with its next project alongside a historic ice pond outside New Haven — in the heart of an industrial district today, where it hopes to create a similar haven for people live and visit for shopping, dining and other leisure activities.

Haynes Group is seeking a zoning change for a 30-acre property it owns at 300 Elm St. in North Haven, which under the town's current IL-80 industrial zone designation does not qualify currently for housing.

Haynes Group aims to change that as an initial step to moving ahead toward additional approvals it would need from zoning and wetlands boards before construction could begin on as many as 400 apartments and 150,000 square feet of retail and commercial space. On the residential front alone, that would rank the project among the 20 largest residential developments in Connecticut tracked currently by CT Insider.

At a meeting this week, the North Haven Planning & Zoning Commission tabled further consideration of the proposal to its next session in early July.

In an April presentation to the P&Z Commission, Haynes Group compared its goals for the site to Quarry Walk in Oxford, where it built a modern village including apartments, retailersrestaurants and commercial space filled both by chains and independent shops, including a Market 32 grocery store. As the case at Quarry Walk, the North Haven development would include a child daycare center.

Haynes Group also plans to build a walking trail at the site and a "community green" for concerts and other activities during the warmer months, with a bandstand backed by the vista of Bruces Ice Pond according to firm principal Patrick Haynes, who led the P&Z Commission presentation in April. 

"What we plan to do in North Haven is very similar in overall size and scope," Haynes said. "People can live — go have an ice cream, sit out on the green, listen to some music, enjoy a spring night. Come walk your dog, even if you don't live here. It's a place for the community."

While New Haven has been an epicenter for Connecticut residential development, projects thin out heading north along the Interstate 91 corridor. Haynes Group has owned the North Haven property for more than two decades, located at 300 Elm St. and hemmed in by I-91 and Sackett Point Road, along with an industrial park opposite North Haven High School.

In addition to a number of industrial and commercial businesses on the opposite side of I-91 along State Street and Universal Drive, the site is opposite North Haven High School with residential neighborhoods just beyond.

Recognizing North Haven High School's significant existing impact on local traffic, Haynes Group said it is planning a traffic study to identify how to add new lanes and traffic signal patterns to improve the corridor's flow.

Behind a screen of trees is Bruces Ice Pond, one of several in North Haven where ice was cut and sold to dairies, butchers and other businesses in the days before the advent of electric refrigeration. Haynes Group plans to make the pond a key part of the development's appeal with leafy walking trails and viewing spots, not dissimilar to those it created along elevations of the historic quarry in Oxford.

Haynes said the company plans to seek input from the community on a name for the development.

The number of cars coming and going on any weekday are one testament to Quarry Walk's success, in addition to the patronage those businesses get from renters in more than 160 apartments at The Residences at Quarry Walk. Another 65 apartments are in the works.

Quarry Walk proved a boon to Oxford on another front, Haynes said — after parts of town were devastated by flooding in August 2024, Quarry Walk helped generate more than $1 million in donations for disaster relief.

"Businesses that have come to Quarry Walk have created somewhere around 2,000 jobs — many of those are jobs that did not exist before," Haynes said in April. "We have somewhere north of 50 businesses — many of them are startup businesses and many of those are people who live in Oxford."