June 28, 2024

CT Construction Digest June 28, 2024

With Norwalk High School and SoNo School under construction, Common Council authorizes $200M+

Kalleen Rose Ozanic



NORWALK — With construction on schedule at the new Norwalk High School and South Norwalk School, the city’s Common Council authorized hundreds of millions in funding for the high school’s construction.

For the high school, the council approved a supplemental appropriation of $189 million to have the full $239 million project cost authorized. The council also issued $15 million in general obligation bonds as “cash on hand” for the project, according to Chief Financial Officer Jared Schmitt.

The state plans to reimburse the city for 80 percent of the cost of the high school, meaning taxpayers are responsible for $47.8 million, but the city still needed to authorize spending for the full amount. 

“As we’re applying for the reimbursement for the project as it goes along, there may be a lag in time where we don't have the grant from the state,” Schmitt said in the council’s meeting Tuesday. “This ($15 million) is, kind of, gap money.”

Additionally, the council moved $19 million from the South Norwalk School project to the high school.

Council Member At-Large Greg Burnett said the city initially doled out $72 million for the South Norwalk School when the project had a 22 percent state reimbursement rate — now, that rate is 60 percent.

“We’re now able to move those funds to the new Norwalk High School,” Burnett said.

At the site of the new high school, formerly Testa Field, contractors are installing aggregate piling into the soil to “provide support for the foundation,” per Alan Lo, the city’s building and facilities manager.

Aggregate piles are gravel columns installed underground by filling tubes with small rocks, Lo said. At other parts of the high school site, excavation is ongoing, he said.

“(With) such a big building, we can do one thing on one side and do another thing on the other side,” Lo said. “The building is so big.”

In roughly two weeks, Lo said, excavation should be complete and all aggregate piles will be in the ground so contractors can lay a foundation and install footing for the building.

At the site of the incoming South Norwalk School, Lo said excavation is complete and contractors have installed roughly 60 percent of the necessary footings.

“We’ve been progressing very well,” the building and facilities manager said.

In April, the the city was under contract with four of the six properties abutting the site of the South Norwalk School; now, the city owns 32 Oxford St., 36 Oxford St. and 38 Oxford St.

Lo said the city expects to close on 28 Oxford St. in the next two to three weeks.

Continuing from April, the city is in good faith negotiations with the owners of 16 Meadow St. Ext. and a 1.13-acre South Main Rail Corridor parcel.

The South Norwalk School is slated for completion in August 2025 and the new Norwalk High School should welcome its first class two years later.


New schools project in Norwich is $50M over budget

Claire Bessette

Norwich ― The school construction project will cost at least $50 million more than the $385 million approved by voters in 2022, due to increased construction and labor expenses, project officials said.

The School Building Committee recently received the sobering news just as the plans for the first two new schools, the Greeneville and John B. Stanton elementary schools, received planning commission approval on Wednesday.

According to updated estimates provided by Mike Faenz, the city’s owner’s representative from Construction Solutions, Inc., the cost of the four new elementary schools now total $310.8 million.

Adding the final two projects ― the $99 million overhaul of the Teachers’ Memorial Global Studies Middle School and a $25 million renovation to Samuel Huntington School as the new central office and adult education building ― increases the total to $434.9 million.

The total is likely to go higher because updated cost estimates are not yet available for Teachers’ Memorial and Huntington schools.

School Building Committee Chairman and Alderman Mark Bettencourt said project officials learned early on that the cost for the new school on the former Greeneville School site would be higher, because of a rocky, steep-sloped topography.

Inflation and widespread construction cost increases have spiraled beyond expectations for the John M. Moriarty and Uncas schools as well, far exceeding the 8% escalation factor in the original budget.

The projected cost for Moriarty jumped from $64.2 million to $80.6 million, and Uncas from $66.7 million to $81.8 million.

“The City Council is going to have to discuss this at some length on what we’re going to do,” Bettencourt said.

Mayor Peter Nystrom said the council is planning an executive session at the end of Monday’s meeting to discuss the cost overruns.

The city could also ask voters in November to approve the higher costs or alter the project.

Bettencourt and Board of Education Chairman Mark Kulos warned that the need for the project has not diminished. The city’s seven aging elementary schools and Teachers Memorial Global Studies Middle School are in dire need of repairs and upgrades to meet state building code requirements.

“Stanton is being held together with baling wire and string,” Bettencourt said at the June 18 building committee meeting. “They’re doing classes in hallways. Our best chance to alleviate some of these issues is trying to get the new numbers passed.”

A key selling point for the $385 million referendum was a building assessment study that estimated the cost of needed repairs at $222 million without any state reimbursement for those repairs.

In contrast, the city will receive 80% state reimbursement for the first two new schools and hopes for the same for the next two schools. The application for reimbursement will be submitted this week.

Nystrom said one option would be to go forward with the four new elementary schools and delay work on Teachers’ Memorial and the Huntington School to a future project.

The building committee on June 18 voted to obtain cost estimates for a new Teachers’ Memorial school instead of a renovation. A new school might be less expensive.

There is still time to plan for a referendum in November, Nystrom said. The council would need to draft an ordinance and hold a public hearing before placing the question on the ballot.

But the building committee will not have final costs for the Stanton and Greeneville schools until it receives construction bids in January.

“There is some thought of waiting until we get actual construction bids on the first schools in January,” Bettencourt said. “If we do that, we will miss the opportunity to go to referendum in November. It would stop the project until we went (to referendum) to get new numbers.”

Kulos said project delays would hurt the school operating budget. The new schools include space to accommodate more special education students now bused to expensive out-of-town specialty schools. Those costs are a leading factor in the school budget ending in a projected $4 million deficit this year.

“The superintendent is counting on that for operational budget savings,” Kulos said.

Bettencourt said stopping the project or putting off parts of it would only raise costs and require the city to pay for repairs with no state reimbursement.

“It’s a complicated thing with a lot of moving parts, because of the nature of the thing and the large scope of the project,” Bettencourt said. “There’s a reason we wanted to go that way.”


Updated plan for Gold Star Highway properties calls for 390 apartments, realigned entrance

Kimberly Drelich

Groton ― An updated plan for the town-owned 517 & 529 Gold Star Highway properties, along with adjacent privately-owned parcels, calls for 390 apartments, housed within five, five-story buildings, and amenities that include a clubhouse and pool.

The Town Council at its Committee of the Whole meeting Tuesday evening approved the updated concept plan and a one-year extension to the option agreement, which was set to expire in September.

The Town Council is slated to take a final vote on July 2.

The previous concept plan approved by the council envisioned about 300 apartments within four, four-story buildings.

At the town’s request, the new plan also realigns the proposed development’s entrance with a signalized intersection at Gold Star Highway and Toll Gate Road.

New multifamily housing developer

Jon Reiner, the town’s director of planning and development services, said this week that in 2019, the town started working with PJ&A LLC as the preferred developer for the town-owned properties.

He said the properties, which have a lot of ledge and are expensive to develop, were once part of a larger development proposal 10 to 15 years ago that did not come to fruition, and the town had acquired them through foreclosure.

“We’re just eager to get it back on the tax rolls since the town foreclosed on the property in 2015,” said Paige Bronk, the town’s economic and community development manager.

Attorney William R. Sweeney wrote in a May letter to the town that over the last several years, PJ&A has worked with several multifamily developers to design and permit the proposed apartment project.

“Due primarily to exceptional sitework costs as well as other related engineering challenges, these efforts have been unsuccessful to date,” Sweeney wrote.

Recently, PJ&A entered into an agreement with Orr Partners, a Virginia-based developer. Orr Partners has developed about 5,000 multifamily units in the eastern part of the country. Orr Partners has an office in Groton and has overseen the construction of facilities for Electric Boat, according to the letter from Sweeney.

The Town Council at a Committee of the Whole meeting earlier this month approved assigning the option agreement for sale of the town-owned property to Orr Partners, Reiner said.

Reiner and Bronk said two privately owned parcels, which are almost six acres in total and which are adjacent to the 11.75-acre town-owned properties, are part of the redevelopment proposal. The privately-owned properties, the former Shetucket Plumbing site and a parcel adjacent to it, will help align the development entrance with the existing intersection with a signal light.

Market-rate apartments

Sweeney told the Council on Tuesday that the five stories with the additional units are needed to offset the cost of the additional rock removal and the realignment of the entrance.

He said the new concept plan also has a smaller development footprint, and there is a larger buffer between the development and Avalonia Land Conservancy land to the south.

Reiner said the proposal will help get more more housing built, get properties back on the tax rolls and would be a good neighbor for Avalonia.

Sweeney said the apartments will be rented at market rates. He said the rents will probably be a little more than $2,000 for two-bedroom units and a little less for one-bedroom units and studios.

During the review, councilors asked questions and said the project would help with the housing shortage, but asked the developer to consider implementing environmentally friendly features such as solar panels, adding an affordable housing component and building a playground and dog park.

Sweeney said the next step is to prepare plans to submit to the town’s Planning and Zoning Commission, and then to apply for a state traffic permit.

Sweeney said the project will be built in phases over two years and units are currently anticipated to be occupied in the spring of 2028.


Deficiencies in New Milford High School's 'traumatic' roof project to be fixed

Kaitlin Lyle

NEW MILFORD — Work to remediate sections of the New Milford High School roof that were insufficiently repaired is expected to be completed over the summer, starting in July, officials say.

“We had a conference call with the bonding company last week and included all the Board of Education partners,” Mayor Pete Bass said at the Town Council meeting on Monday. “They’re going to deploy all their resources to fix that portion of the roof… They did agree to do the right thing, which is to make the high school roof contractually [finished] like it should have been all along.”

The six-year-long ordeal has included two fires, leaks and the discovery that some panels had been fastened improperly. 

The town and school board have been discussing their options for finalizing repairs on the roof over the last five months — particularly in terms of addressing the fasteners and clips installed on the roof by United Roofing & Sheet Metal, the project’s original contractor. Officials also remedied persistent leaking issues in the roof that were traced back to the roof’s cupola this past spring.

The roof project began about six years ago as a $4.75 million effort to upgrade the aging roof and repair damage from a microburst storm in 2018. Silver Petrucelli & Associates, hired by the town in 2020, recommended replacing the asphalt roof and restoring the flat roof with a standing seam roof.

Work on the roof was delayed after the roof caught fire twice, with the second fire in July 2022 causing damages to the roof and the high school building.

While repairs were completed late last year by Greenwood Industries, a roofing contractor, safety concerns were raised about the fasteners and clips installed by the original company. 

Dean Petrucelli, architect for Silver Petrucelli & Associates, reported to the town’s Municipal Building Committee last May that some of the roof’s panels had been fastened with two screws while other panels had been fastened with only one screw, according to the committee’s meeting minutes. United Roofing had completed part of the project but was fired after the second roof blaze.

The contractor Fuss & O’Neill, hired by the town in September to assess the standing seam metal roof, found single screws at many clips on the roof as well as “sporadic” spacing of the screws, according to an Oct. 10 report from Fuss & O’Neill’s senior project manager Richard Boggs.

Yet Boggs said in his Oct. 10 report that Fuss & O’Neill did not believe the fasteners’ installation posed “an immediate safety risk” to the building’s occupants, and the roof’s deficiencies will “only be significant” in a severe weather event that results in winds speeds in the range of 120 mph.

‘Now’s the time’

Wendy Faulenbach, chairperson of the school board, said at the board’s June 18 meeting the board was notified of plans to work on the roof this summer to bring the roof “to the caliber that was in the scope of the project.Top of Form

“We want that roof to be repaired,” Faulenbach said. “For me personally, this is the time to have it happen when you don’t have students and staff in the building at the capacity that we normally do. I endorse whatever we can to get that project rectified, completed, warranteed, bonded and reimbursed and have it safe… by the scope of the project of which it was designed. Now’s the time.”

Faulenbach said the project’s tentative start date is July 8.

Bass said at the council’s June 18 meeting that Crum & Forster, the bonding company assigned to the roof project, has been assigned to the new project, which he said will entail repairing the affected section of the roof panel by panel. 

He said there will be a clerk that will catalog, document and take pictures of every step in the project — including every screw, panel, pin and clip — and the project is expected to take 100 days to complete. Garland, the manufacturer assigned to the fasteners, will guarantee the roof after repairs are completed, which will allow for reimbursement from the state Department of Education, Bass said.

“There’s been true damage to our community,” Faulenbach on the roof project’s impact. “We’re not talking dollars — we’re talking traumatic to our students and staff.”


Connecticut Senate passes fixes to car tax and school construction issues in special session

Ken Dixon

HARTFORD — The Democratic dominated state Senate, over Republican opposition, on Wednesday approved legislation containing eight separate pieces in an omnibus bill ranging from a lowering of commercial vehicle taxes in some of Connecticut's higher-taxed communities, to prohibiting state employees from subcontracting school construction projects, and expediting the review process for the development of historic buildings.

The three-hour-long Senate session was highlighted by GOP criticism of a provision that would allow for a Connecticut-based water company to purchase Aquarion, as well as a protracted argument over whether an effort to lower taxes on commercial vehicles would include a long-term, five-percent hike on residential vehicle taxes. The GOP lawmakers offered three amendments that were all rejected along party lines.

 The 20-to-9 final vote with seven senators missing occurred at 3:15 p.m. in the first day of the two-day gathering of the General Assembly, which continues with the House of Representatives on Thursday.

Republicans warned that the proposed change in state law to allow the New Haven-based South Central Connecticut Regional Water Authority to bid for Aquarion, a division of the Massachusetts-based Eversource, could backfire in higher rates for Aquarion's current 59-town service area. They sharply criticized the possible deal's inclusion in the special legislative session, whose agenda items were brought up under so-called emergency provisions of the General Assembly.

 Democrats said any potential deal creating a new Aquarion Water Authority would first have to be approved by the state Public Utilities Regulatory Authority.

Senate Minority Leader Stephen Harding, R-Brookfield, stressed that because the water company provision was never discussed in the recent regular session of the General Assembly, the issue should not have been part of Wednesday's agenda. "This is something that's going to impact the water rates and the water supply to 700,000 people in the state of Connecticut and we're saying to them that we don't even want a public hearing on this," Harding said. "What does that say to our constituency?"

At about 12:15, Harding started off the session with a scolding of the chamber, calling the overall bill "an aircraft carrier" with so many different pieces. He proposed "dividing the question" and voting separately on the water company part.

The proposal was rejected along party lines 19-to-9 with 8 absent in the chamber, which is dominated by Democrats 24-12.

By 12:40, Sen. John Fonfara, D-Hartford, co-chairman of the tax-writing legislative Finance Committee started the main debate, explaining a portion of the law that is needed, because without action,"significant difficulties" would occur starting Oct. 1 for commercial vehicle owners in 46 towns and cities with tax rates above 32.46 mills, including as many as 11 towns, especially Waterbury, Hartford and Hamden, that would be taxed at higher levels. Vehicle depreciation rates would also be changed.

"Without action today this change would result in significant difficulty for both town assessors and commercial vehicle owners," Fonfara said. "Commercial motor vehicle owners would be assessed as personal property."

"There were underlying mistakes in the bill," said Sen. Norm Needleman, D-Essex, noting lingering problems date back to 2022 legislation. Needleman, who is also the first selectman of his hometown, said a fixed assessment level is important, including the 20-year phase-in eventually reducing car values to $500.

Another portion of the bill would allow local tax officials around the state to study and potentially enact the lowering and even phasing-out of personal property taxes on vehicles, effective in July of 2025.

"If you live in a city and you look at your car and you go to a suburb right next to it, the difference in taxation is very apparent," said Senate Majority Leader Bob Duff, D-Norwalk. "It's one that really makes your eyes pop out. There's an unfairness there. If we're telling people we're trying to invest in our cities and our municipalities and our urban areas, but yet it costs more to live there, that is really against the policies we're trying to put forward in this state."

The financial portion of the 137-page bill, at the request of Gov. Ned Lamont, aims to make Connecticut more attractive for bank-to-bank lenders by changing the definition of uninsured banks in the state to "innovation banks." It would also make changes in interest rates on late tax filings of underpayments for insurance companies, dating back to the federal pandemic relief for employee retention.

State Sen. Rob Sampson, R-Wolcott, whose district includes part of Waterbury, called the change to commercial vehicle taxes appropriate and needed, but the proposed depreciation rate concerns him. "Why are we going to increase the value of everyone's car by 5 percent over the next 20 years?" Sampson said. "I have promised by constituents I would not vote to raise taxes."

Fonfara said towns would receive less revenue. "If towns are receiving less revenue, car owners are paying less in taxes," Fonfara said. 

Sampson said he was worried about average private vehicle owners paying more over time and he introduced an amendment aimed at making car taxes lower. Fonfara opposed the amendment, which was defeated along party lines.

"Characterizing this as a tax increase is just incorrect," Needleman said during the debate on the amendment. "With a little bit of luck we will never hear about this again."

Sen. Ryan Fazio, R-Greenwich said that raising the depreciation level for new cars from the current 80 percent to 85, as detailed in the bill, clearly raises taxes for owners. "The affordability of Connecticut is a stressor on Connecticut families," said Sen. Kevin Kelly, R-Stratford. "The Connecticut family is struggling each day, living paycheck to paycheck."

"What we're simply doing doing today is changing the tax rate from 80 percent to 85 percent," Harding said. "Eighty five is more than 80, period. You can try to do fuzzy math all you want."

"Assessments don't determine taxes," said Senate President Pro Tempore Martin Looney, D-New Haven, "mill rates determine taxes." He said that there was a "spike" in used car values at the height of the pandemic because of supply chain problems. "Whether it's 80 or 85, the decision is still in the hands of the municipality to decide what its rate will bill. In addition to that, we are reminding municipalities in this bill, where the authority in some cases may not be clear, that they do in fact have the option of creating a differential car tax, as long as the car tax is lower than the tax on real and commercial property."


Amid decarbonization efforts, New England’s energy demand expected to increase 23% over next decade

Skyler Frazer

New England’s energy demand is expected to increase 23% over the next decade, the head of the region’s largest power generator association said at an annual energy conference earlier this month, and stakeholders in the region should focus on energy reliability and affordability as decarbonization efforts continue.

New England Power Generators Association President Dan Dolan, during the Connecticut Business & Industry Association’s 2024 Energy & Environment Conference, gave an overview of the region’s power generation outlook, and what Northeast states need to do in the coming years as the country continues to hone in on renewable and clean energy alternatives.

He said there’s “incredible economic opportunity” in the energy sector, and investments must be made to meet the region’s future needs.

“Demand is coming — we see a really consistent rise over time,” Dolan said of energy usage over the next 10 years, which will be driven by the accelerating electrification of heating systems and transportation. “Energy efficiency is great, but we’re going to need to produce a whole lot more.”

Grid outlook

New England is responsible for 2.8% of all carbon dioxide emissions in the U.S., Dolan said, and much of the region’s energy policy is driven by decarbonization. Most of those emissions are from commercial and retail heating and transportation, he said, and “opportunistic electrification” in the transportation and heating industries can help the region continue its focus on renewable energy.

However, that will also drive up energy demand. To meet those needs, decarbonization must be a multifaceted effort, he said. While alternative energy options like solar and wind have had a lot of time in the spotlight recently, Dolan emphasized the need to continue to support existing clean energy sources like hydro and nuclear as decarbonization efforts grow over the next several years.

“We need every ounce of the clean energy that is on the planning board right now and that we expect to continue to be financed and developed, but we also need to preserve nearly all of the assets that serve as the backbone of the system,” Dolan said.

In 2023, 49% of the region’s energy supply came from natural gas, 20% nuclear, 8% hydro, 10% renewables (such as wind and solar), and 13% net imports, according to new data from ISO New England.

Notably absent from that list are coal and oil, which combined for less than 0.5% of megawatt hours in the region in 2023.

“That is a dramatic shift over the last 15 to 20 years that has created remarkable emissions benefits for the region,” Dolan said.

At the CBIA event, ISO New England’s Lead State Policy Advisor for External Affairs Kerry Schlichting gave an overview of the region’s future expected power grid breakdown. According to projections from ISO New England, the total electricity production breakdown in 2040 will be: 56% renewables; 13% nuclear; 12% natural gas; 3% hydro; and 16% imports. No electricity is expected to come from coal or oil by then, she said.

Dolan said ultimately, decarbonization needs to be a national effort, but states like Connecticut, and New England as a region, can help lead.

“I remain hugely optimistic that we are going to find our way through this, but getting to those three legs of the stool — reliability, affordability and decarbonization — we can do two out of three of those pretty directly and easily. The real challenge is doing all three at once,” Dolan said.


June 26, 2024

CT Construction Digest Wednesday June 26, 2024

Pratt & Whitney proposes nearly 50% increase in size of new East Hartford office building

Andrew Larson

Pratt & Whitney is proposing to increase the size of a new planned office building on its East Hartford campus by nearly 50%, with the addition of two stories, including outdoor amenities for employees and greenspace.

The jet-engine maker has submitted a revised zoning application to the town, which is on the agenda for the Planning and Zoning Commission’s meeting at 7 p.m. Wednesday.

A spokesman for Pratt & Whitney's parent company, RTX, said the zoning application does not signal any commitment to build the new office, but is a required step as it reviews and considers real estate options.

"We continually assess our Connecticut campus and options to improve on our current footprint to meet the needs of our business," the company's statement said.

Pratt & Whitney originally received approval for a 313,00-square-foot building with five stories. The new plans call for a 465,000-square-foot building with seven stories.

The seventh story includes outdoor amenity areas for employees, including a patio and vegetated “green roof.” The footprint of the building will not change.

Under the proposal, an existing 249,847-square-foot office building, which houses design and engineering staff, will be demolished to make way for the new building and an adjacent employee parking lot.

Under the original proposal, the parking lot contained 1,347 spaces; the new plans show 1,458 parking spaces.

The increased size of the office building would not require any changes in the grading, drainage, utilities, lighting or landscaping from the original approval, the application states.

The project would result in a net increase of 215,143 square feet of office space at Pratt & Whitney’s 251.2-acre campus at 400 Main St. 

The original plan had a net gain of 63,143 square feet of office space.

The new building is located on a 17.75-acre portion of the campus, near Runway Road, which runs along the eastern outskirts of the property.

Pratt & Whitney is asking the town for zoning approval of the site plan modification.

The company has been redeveloping its East Hartford campus, which once spanned more than 1,000 acres, for years.

In 2014, Pratt & Whitney parent company United Technologies Corp. — which is now known as RTX Corp., following its 2020 merger with Raytheon Technologies — agreed to invest up to $500 million over five years to upgrade and expand its East Hartford research and development and manufacturing facilities. 

In exchange for that investment, state lawmakers — led by then Gov. Dannel P. Malloy — voted to allow the company to cash in up to $400 million in previously earned, but unused, tax credits to finance the construction projects.

One of the major projects, a new 425,000-square-foot engineering and technology building, debuted in 2017.

In January 2023, Pratt & Whitney sold 300 acres to Massachusetts-based National Development, which has since built two logistics warehouses on-site with a combined 2.5 million square feet.

The buildings have been fully leased to Lowe’s Home Improvement and online retailer Wayfair.

At the same time, Pratt & Whitney is continuing to invest outside of its home state.

In May, the company announced it would invest $20 million to expand a key plant in West Palm Beach, Florida.

Pratt & Whitney said the expansion would increase the capacity of the Florida maintenance, repair and overhaul facility for its GTF engine by 40% by the second half of 2025.


Construction hasn’t started, but West Hartford luxury apartments already selling

David Krechevsky

There is so much interest in living in West Hartford Center that people are willing to pay more than $1 million for the privilege.

Center Park Place, a mixed-use residential and commercial infill development to be constructed at Arapahoe and LaSalle roads and Farmington Avenue, will feature up to 58 luxury condominiums that are already listed for sale at more than $1 million. 

An infill development repurposes land in an urban environment. 

The project includes demolishing two buildings and erecting two new buildings. One of the new buildings will have four residential floors over three levels of parking, including one underground. That building will be located in the center of the property behind 53-65 and 27-43 LaSalle Road and 1001 Farmington Ave.

The development also will include a five-story building with 25 units of rental housing on the top four floors and 3,470 square feet of commercial space on the ground floor. 

One of the conditions of approval for the development set by the West Hartford Town Council states that the second building will include “four residential rental units” designated as affordable for individuals or families with incomes at or below 80% of the area median income for the town.

The project will demolish two small buildings at 8 and 12 Arapahoe Road, but the large office and commercial buildings at 27-43 and 53-65 LaSalle Road and at 1001 Farmington Ave. will remain.

Condo unit configurations will range from one bedroom to three bedroom layouts, with prices ranging from $1.2 million to $1.8 million. Because construction has not started, buyers have the option to purchase two or more units and combine them. 

The unit listings, posted by Coldwell Banker Realty, went live on May 23 and have already drawn significant interest, according to agent Kate D’Addabbo.

“We have 12 units under reserve,” she said recently, adding that 46 units remain available. “You can do a 30-day reservation, and then we would deliver a contract in 30 days.” She declines to disclose sale prices because no sales had yet closed.

D’Addabbo said the demand reflects the desire of some homeowners to sell their homes but remain in town and be more centrally located, while also a sign that others who live outside of West Hartford are interested as well.

“I think a lot of people are really turning towards walkability and being close to town centers,” she said. “It’s a healthy lifestyle, just being able to walk everywhere, which I think is a huge reason that West Hartford is very popular, because it’s becoming more and more pedestrian friendly all around town.”

D’Addabbo described the project as a Class A building designed to be not only luxurious but offering many amenities. Those include secure parking, a lobby with a concierge, a community pool deck, a gym, and a roof deck. 

One of the developers of the project is Marc Lewis, the principal managing member of Lexham Realty Management based in Westport. Lexham owns the properties at 53-65 LaSalle Road, 27-43 LaSalle Road, and 1001 Farmington Ave. Another parcel, at 12 Arapahoe Road, is owned by The Arapahoe Group LLC. 

In addition to Lexham and the Arapahoe Group, developers involved in the project include the Manafort family and Figure Eight Properties, which is owned by Robert Simons and his family.

Lewis said the group of developers expect to close on financing in early August, when initial site work would begin. 

“Certainly, everything will start this year,” he said. “And the construction for the big main building in the back will take two years.” 

He said he expects the group to seek a permit for the second phase when the first building is in the “latter stages” of construction.

The building, he added, will be a concrete and steel structure. “It’s extremely high end in terms of its materials.”

The existing four-story glass, concrete and steel office building at 53-65 LaSalle Road was erected in 1978. It features more than 102,000 square feet of office and commercial space and is occupied in part by a Webster Bank branch and Becker’s Diamonds & Fine Jewelry.

Lewis declined to say what the current occupancy rate for that building is, though he said it is “very well occupied,” and added that its tenants will likely have to park in the nearby town garage during construction.

He also said it is typical for a luxury condominium project to list units for sale long before construction is complete. “It’s supply and demand,” he said, “but also financing requirements usually have a pre-sale requirement to get a construction loan.” 

He added that pre-sales draw interest because “as time goes by, the price will go up.”

D’Addabbo said she believes the project is important because there is a need for inventory on the housing market.

“We need all sorts of housing,” she said. “If we sell 58 condos here, that’s 58 homes that get freed up, which we are all desperate for.”


Lawmakers uneasy over special session bill on Aquarion sale

Mark Pazniokas

Without a public hearing or other vetting, the state Senate is scheduled to vote Wednesday on a measure that would allow a New Haven-based public water authority to acquire one of the nation’s largest investor-owned water companies, Aquarion Water Company.

The enabling legislation sought by the South Central Connecticut Regional Water Authority would allow it to bid on Aquarion, a Bridgeport-based company that Eversource Energy acquired for $1.675 billion in 2017 and is now attempting to sell in a volatile market roiled by Connecticut’s regulatory environment.

Public authorities are outside the jurisdiction of the Public Utilities Regulatory Authority, so Aquarion’s operations, finances and rates no longer would be subject to the approval of state regulators if the company is obtained by the Regional Authority, or RWA.

The Regional Water Authority’s interest in Aquarion was not widely known until The Connecticut Mirror reported Friday that Gov. Ned Lamont and legislative leaders had agreed to include the topic in the call for a special session. The issue is one of several addressed in a single omnibus bill to be debated Wednesday.

“It was totally out of left field,” said Rep. Jonathan Steinberg, D-Westport, co-chair of the Energy and Technology Committee. “Obviously, there’s some measure of emergency if they want to bid in, but that’s not adhering to the typical process, and that’s a pretty big concern.”

“This is rather sudden, and it’s a major change in public policy. I’m open to it,” said Sen. Ryan Fazio of Greenwich, the ranking Republican on the energy committee, but he wants to know more. “It’s not something we discussed in the past session.”

One question is why the authority did not seek the legislation, or at least broach its potential need, during the regular session that opened on Feb. 7 and ended on May 8. Eversource disclosed its intentions to explore an Aquarion sale on Feb. 13, the same day it posted a full-year loss of $442 million for 2023.

“In a better world, we’d have more time to vet it,” said Sen. Norm Needleman, D-Essex, the other co-chair of the energy committee.

In lieu of the formal vetting required in a regular session, Steinberg spoke Tuesday with Larry Bingaman, the president and chief executive of the RWA, quizzing him on governance, oversight and setting of rates, and other issues. Bingaman noted, among other things, that the bill would enhance the likelihood of Aquarion remaining under local control, Steinberg said.

“I’m certainly still on the fence,” Steinberg said.

The proposed legislation was not available Tuesday night, but CT Mirror obtained a draft bill that would create, if a purchase were successful, an Aquarion Water Authority with the nearly identical powers as the RWA, including the ability to purchase and condemn property and issue bonds.

Representatives of the member towns would sit on a 60-member policy council that would advise and appoint five people to the authority’s 11-member governing board.

Lawmakers and others were trying to assess whether the Regional Water Authority, whose rates would not be set by PURA, could afford to make a higher bid for Aquarion than regulated competitors.

The Connecticut Water Co. also is considering making a bid, said Craig Patla, its president. But a non-regulated bidder would have a clear advantage, he said.

“I would say that having having a non-regulated entity in the Regional Water Authority being able to bid and potentially pay a premium for this utility — and not have PURA oversight — would definitely put the thumb on the scale” in any competitive bidding, Patla said. 

PURA could review the terms of a sale of Aquarion but not its rates if purchased by RWA.

Kevin Watsey, the director of public affairs for the RWA, said the authority’s board would provide sufficient oversight of the new entity’s operations and rates.

“There is a voice of the people,” he said.

Aquarion is one of the seven largest investor-owned water utilities in the U.S., with 236,000 customer accounts in 72 cities and towns, most of them in Connecticut, and 13 in Massachusetts and New Hampshire. A key part of its business is supplying water to a small but densely population portion of Fairfield County, including Bridgeport, Norwalk, Stamford and Greenwich.

It had net income of $33 million on a $1.3 billion base rate in 2023.

An Aquarion rate case was one of the early flash points in the contentious relationship between the state’s largest utility, Eversource, and PURA, a regulatory authority that has grown more aggressive in scrutinizing utility rates and expenses since Marissa P. Gillett was appointed as its chair.

Rather than grant an increase, PURA instead cut Aquarion’s rates. A Superior Court judge rejected the company’s administrative appeal, prompting a request for a review by the Connecticut Supreme Court. Wall Street has responded negatively to PURA’s oversight.

The Senate is scheduled to meet at 11 a.m. Wednesday to consider the single bill. In the draft reviewed by CT Mirror, 58 of its 139 pages involved the RWA and Aquarion. The House will convene on Thursday. Neither chamber is expected to be in session for more than a few hours.

A special session has been discussed since shortly after the regular session ended without passing a legislative fix needed to prevent an increase in motor vehicle taxes this fall, an unintended consequence of a 2022 bill.

The fix would continued to classify commercial vehicles as motor vehicles, and it would clarify that current law allows municipalities to establish mill rates on motor vehicles that are lower than mill rates on real property and personal property.

The agenda has steadily grown, mainly with technical proposals involving regulation of banking, insurance and the state’s publicly available retirement savings program.

At the governor’s request, the bill would roll back a liberalizing of school construction bidding rules that was included in a fiscal bill in the last days of the regular session.

A more contentious provision, which was floated only last week, would streamline the process by which the State Historic Preservation Office reviews the redevelopment of historic properties.

The leaders of the legislature’s Commerce Committee, who have sought the changes, did not return calls for comment.

House Minority Leader Vincent J. Candelora, R-North Branford, said the historic preservation issue was the only one to be taken up in special session that is not time-sensitive.

But Candelora said the issue had been publicly vetted by the Commerce Committee in regular session.


East Hartford park gets funding to renovate river walk and connect it to other trails in town

Jamila Young

EAST HARTFORD — The Connecticut River is no stranger to flooding, but the overseers of one town park hope that a recent state grant will help them to not only make needed improvements to keep its river walk safe for visitors, but connect it to other trails in the area.

East Hartford has received $262,750 through the Connecticut Recreational Trails Grant Program to help address erosion and flooding issues at Great River Park on East River Drive, part of $10 million in grants announced by Gov. Ned Lamont and the state Department of Energy and Environmental Protection earlier this month to make improvements to 45 multi-use trails across the state.

Marc A. Nicol, director of park planning and development for Riverfront Recapture, which manages the park, said that the funds will be used to hire a consultant engineer to do survey work and determine the elevations of certain areas of the river walk.

"Then they'll come back and design a river walk," Nicol said of the consultants, "and we're going to ask them to raise it as high as they can." 

He said that the project will start at the edge of the parking lot, where the amphitheater is, and go south toward Charter Oak Bridge.

"At high tide, the dirt along the river's edge becomes under water, and the whole park goes under water," Nicol said. "There's 5 to 6 feet of water across that parking lot in the spring. We've lost a lot of riverbank. The river's edge used to be quite a bit further away from the river walk." 

He said that along the river walk, there are areas where the riverbank has eroded to the edge of the walkway. 

"And there's some vertical drops, 6- to 8-foot drops," Nicol said. "If we don't address those, then we will lose the river walk. It will no longer be accessible."

The plan also includes new paths and connections to other areas of town, including American Eagle Federal Credit Union and area magnet schools, as well as future housing developments.

Great River Park includes amenities such as a boat launch, charcoal grills, a fitness station, fishing access, and a playground. It provides a view of downtown Hartford, and includes lighted walkways and a parking lot.

"We are happy to partner with Riverfront Recapture on this grant project. They are professional and effective, and have been a great organization and resource for the town on riverfront activities," East Hartford Development Director Eileen Buckheit said. "We are happy to strive to continue improvements for our residents and environmental benefit."

The grant, administered by DEEP, is awarded to private nonprofit organizations, municipalities, state departments, and tribal governments in support of recreational trail projects.

The state Bond Commission approved funding last October.

Grant amounts vary, but organizations that apply are asked to request less than $1 million. The grants can pay up to 80 percent of the total project cost with a required 20 percent match.

Funding can be used for "a wide variety of purposes," according to DEEP, including planning, design, land acquisition, construction, construction administration, and publications for bikeways, walkways, and greenways, as well as for equipment and trail amenities, such as parking lots, toilet buildings, signs, and benches.

Locally, Hartford received a $160,000 grant to assist with planning, design, and outreach for its Park Trail Connectivity Action Plan; New Britain was awarded $388,160 for the planning, design, and construction of its Stanley Loop Trail Neighborhood Connections; and West Hartford received $100,000 for the planning and design of for its multi-use connectivity and planning study. 

“These projects represent an investment in our communities, connecting our residents and visitors with open spaces, and providing equitable and accessible outdoor recreation opportunities,” DEEP Commissioner Katie Dykes said. “Connection to Connecticut’s natural resources benefit everyone physically and mentally and enhance our state’s overall economy.”


New Partnership Bets on Updated Mixed-Use Model for Southeastern Connecticut

Francisco Uranga

For the last decade, small towns across America have been pitched a vision of mixed-use development that too often falls flat for prospective business and tenants. A new partnership in southeastern Connecticut is looking to change that by betting on a newer model of retail and residential development. 

Old-Lyme-based READCO announced last week that it had sold its portfolio —more than two million square feet of commercial space— to Glastonbury-based Trio Properties, which manages about 2,500 multifamily units in Connecticut and 15 other states. As part of the deal, the companies’ owners decided on a partnership to jointly manage a real estate development and investment company that will operate under the READCO brand.

Jeremy Browning, co-founder and managing principal of Trio, will be READCO’s new executive director of development. Browning noted that the companies had a years-long history of working together – one focused on multifamily housing and the other on commercial development. 

“It made a lot of sense for us to bring management together and share some back-house corporate resources, to build a better, bigger platform,” Browning said. “Like a Swiss Army knife, it gives us the ability to mix and match community needs.”

Browning spoke on Thursday with CT Examiner in an interview that also included Michael Lech, former READCO president who will become chief investment officer for the new partnership. 

According to Browning, there is strong demand for housing and commercial development in southeastern Connecticut which hasn’t been met by the more familiar ground floor retail model..

“The only way to get a project developed was to have ground retail with residential above but a lot of those deals fell flat because the authentic need wasn’t there,” Browning said. “It was something done just to get approved. We want to be better than that.”

An example of the model they want to promote is the joint Trio-READCO development in Pawcatuck, where they are proposing to build a housing and commercial complex on the site of the vacant Hoyt’s/Regal theater on Route 2 which declared bankruptcy during the pandemic. 

The project contemplates separate living, shopping and recreational components, with the latter designed to serve the entire surrounding community, not just the complex residents. 

The nearly $90 million project calls for 232 residential units, 10,000 square feet of commercial space, 25,000 square feet for a YMCA recreation center and 30,000 square feet of medical offices, Browning said in a follow-up email. At least 20 percent of the units would be for people earning less than 80 percent of the area’s median income, which is $43,960 for a single person and $56,400 a year for a family of three. 

Adjacent to the complex is a Stop and Shop, Northeast Medical Group and Stonington Medical Center as well as a McDonald’s – all previously managed by READCO and purchased by Trio.

One of the Pawcatuck project’s strengths, according to Lech, is the proximity to Foxwood and Electric Boat, workplaces where employees have strong benefit packages that will attract medical and dental offices, said Lech. 

About 25 years ago, Lech founded READCO to manage his family’s real estate holdings. Now, Lech has decided to get out of the management business and focus on development. He told CT Examiner the deal with Trio will enable him to dedicate more efforts to the development pipeline. As a result of their new team’s skills, Lech said they will be able to manage a greater number of projects at the same time.

Lech’s job now is to look for potential development opportunities in southeastern Connecticut.

“The I-95 corridor, from New Haven to Pawcatuck, is an exciting place to be right now. There are a lot of opportunities. I think that the whole region is set to keep on growing substantially,” Lech said. “And I love Old Lyme.”



June 25, 2024

CT Construction Digest Monday June 24, 20224

Gold Star Bridge path to be renovated

Kimberly Drelich

The state Department of Transportation plans to widen the sidewalk across the southbound Gold Star Memorial Bridge between Groton and New London so it is safer and easier to access for pedestrians and bicyclists.

Tracey Brais, project manager with the DOT, told a room of more than 30 people in New London City Hall’s Council Chambers Monday evening that the DOT is excited about the $55 million project and thinks it’s going to create many improvements for bicyclists and pedestrians across the Thames River.

Brais and project representatives unveiled the plan at a public information meeting held Monday evening at City Hall and by Zoom.

Some attendees, while appreciating the proposed project, had suggestions such as creating more safety improvements in the areas near the bridge and adding signs for those who use the path. They also had concerns about the impacts of construction and the reduction of a lane on the southbound bridge.

Brais, who outlined the project to The Day, said the existing sidewalk, on the approximately 1-mile-long southbound span, is about five-feet wide, though it narrows down to about three feet in some areas due to lights and overhead sign structures. She said the existing path is very narrow for pedestrians and bicyclists to travel in both directions.

The project calls for widening the path to about 14-feet for most of the length, and about 11 feet in some areas to accommodate bicycle and pedestrian traffic in both directions, she said.

The project also calls for widening the sidewalks approaching the bridge to 10 feet and adding deterrents to prevent mopeds and ATVs, which use the path even though they are prohibited from doing so, from accessing it.

On the New London side, the path currently terminates in Bailey Circle. The DOT plans to construct a new side path ending at Williams Street, she said.

On the Groton side, the DOT is proposing to install a roundabout at the intersection at the Interstate 95 on-and-off ramps and Bridge Street, she said.

One car lane to be eliminated

The sidewalk expansion project will result in the reduction of one lane on the southbound bridge, she said.

Brais said the southbound span currently has six lanes at the east end of the bridge and then it narrows down to five lanes. Once completed, the bridge will be mostly four lanes instead of five lanes as it is now.

Brais said the DOT did a traffic analysis and found the proposed change won’t really affect the level of service. She said the bridge’s original design has extra capacity built-in because there are two lanes from the Bridge Street on-ramp to I-95 southbound, and the DOT found one lane would be sufficient, based on current and projected traffic volumes.

The DOT anticipates construction will start in the spring 2028 and be completed in the fall of 2029, she said.

The northbound span of the bridge will be under rehabilitation at the same time, but the planned rerouting of two northbound lanes to the southbound span, anticipated to begin in 2026, is expected to be completed by the spring of 2028.

The DOT also will strengthen steel on the southbound bridge, with an anticipated project timeline from June 2025 through July 2026, Brais said.

The sidewalk project is estimated to cost $55 million, to be paid for with 90% federal funds and 10% state funds, Brais said.

Brais said the DOT has been working with the cities of New London and Groton to understand their revitalization plans and their plans to improve bike and pedestrian travel. She said the project will help create better bicycle and pedestrian connections on both sides of the bridge.

Overall, an estimated 6,500 Groton and New London residents typically walk or bike to work. She said there’s a lot of opportunity for more people to start using the path for commuting and recreational purposes if the state makes it a safer and a better experience.

State Rep. Christine Conley, D-Groton, said she’s very excited to see improvements to the bridge, but asked for more information about the construction impacts. She said she and the delegation also would like to take a look at the traffic study and the impacts of reducing a lane on the southbound bridge.

Brais said the DOT will post construction schedules on its website.

Brian Sheffer, a Groton City resident, said in an interview before the meeting that he primarily commutes by bike to work at Electric Boat in New London. He said when new pieces of concrete for signs were installed a few years ago, it made the path narrower in spots. He said if a scooter is traveling the other way while he is cycling, it can be dangerous.

Sheffer said he typically gets on the bridge on the Groton side around Bliven Street and Riverview Avenue and avoids the Bridge Street intersection because of the traffic. He said the roundabout would not entice him to use that area, and he will continue to access the bridge from where he does now.

Matt Thomas, a Groton resident, said in an interview before the meeting that he crosses the bridge on bike multiple times a week, both to commute to his job in Old Lyme and for recreation. He said the existing path is “barely adequate” because it’s too narrow.

He said he thinks the improvement project “makes a lot of sense” and will certainly address the path being too narrow and hopefully also will make the on and off ramps safer for bicyclists.

According to the presentation, the path will remain closed for up to 1.5 years during construction but a shuttle to New London will be provided.

The DOT said people can comment on the sidewalk improvement project, known as Project No. 0094-0267, and ask questions by July 8 by emailing DOT.GoldStarBridgeProjects@ct.gov or calling (860) 594-2020.

More information on the projects being planned for the bridge is available at https://portal.ct.gov/dot/bridges/project-pages/gold-star-memorial-bridge


Norwich, New London, Preston seek state funding for major local projects

Claire Bessette

Norwich, New London and Preston are hoping state leaders will pay attention to southeastern Connecticut in the latest round of grant requests submitted Friday to the state Community Investment Fund.

Gov. Ned Lamont created the $875 million fund for eligible distressed municipalities to fund major capital improvements projects and grants for small-business capital projects, as well as planning grants for future projects.

In grant requests submitted Friday, Norwich is seeking a total of $23.3 million in three requests, topped by the $17 million request to complete the demolition and cleanup of the partially collapsed and abandoned former Capehart Mill in Greeneville. Norwich last week received approval for a $4 million state brownfields grant to begin the massive cleanup project to create a riverfront park.

Norwich also requested $5 million to convert Fontaine Field on Mahan Drive into an artificial turf multi-use field with a running track and handicapped access to the Rose City Senior Center next door.

The third Norwich request is for a $250,000 planning grant for an environmental assessment of the 49-acre former Norwich Hospital property in Norwich, owned by Thames River Place LLC. Unlike neighboring Preston, which has nearly completed cleanup of its 393-acre former Norwich Hospital property, Norwich never took ownership of its portion of the campus. It remains dominated by decaying buildings and overgrown vegetation.

New London seeks $4.8 million

New London submitted requests for three projects totaling $4.8 million. The city seeks $3.6 million to expand and renovate the Water Street parking garage. The project will add 250 more parking spaces on the structure's east side.

The city is also applying for $950,000 to transform properties at 157 Green St. ― the former Apostolic Cathedral of Hope ― and 6 Union St. into 29 residential units.

New London is applying for a $250,000 planning grant for a project to raze and rebuild the senior housing units at Gordon Court, owned and managed by the city's Housing Authority. The plan calls for demolition of 38 existing units and replacing them with a single 74-unit building.

Preston eyes Poquetanuck Village transformation

Preston town officials hope to use a requested $3 million CIF grant to continue to transform the Route 2A into a village street, with measures to slow traffic, improve pedestrian and bicycle access and an off-street trail connecting the village to the Route 12 former Norwich Hospital property.

The new request would fund engineering and design planning for a multi-use trail paralleling Route 2A from Poquetanuck Village to the Preston Riverwalk on the former Norwich Hospital property. The request includes design funding for improvements to the Route 2A-12 junction for better pedestrian access in anticipation of future development.

Town planner Kathy Warzecha said the town was unsuccessful in its previous CIF request for the trail funding but received state feedback to improve the application.

Preston is trying to piece together various grants for the overall Poquetanuck Village project. The town received an initial boost with a $3 million state Local Transportation Capital Improvements Program grant for the traffic calming project, and a complementary $400,000 CIF grant for design and engineering for the project. Another $70,000 grant will pay for a parking area and kayak launch at Poquetanuck Cove, Warzecha said.

Separate from the new CIF request, Preston has submitted a grant application for a $4 million Transportation Alternatives grant to construct the off-road trail that eventually would connect the town senior housing on Lincoln Park, Preston Community Park, the Tri-Town Trail, Poquetanuck Cove and Preston Riverwalk.

“Putting all of this together is like a jigsaw puzzle,” Warzecha said.

Groton sitting out this round

Jon Reiner, director of planning and development services, said Groton is not applying for a CIF grant this round. The town had previously applied for a CIF grant for the Pleasant Valley School property and did not get the grant.

Thames Valley Council for Community Action did receive a $2 million CIF grant for its proposal to expand its childcare center in Groton.

“We are very excited that our project has been selected by the state as a priority to address childcare needs in the greater Groton area,” TVCCA Chief Executive Officer Joshua Steele Kelly said, “and we look forward to continued partnership with the state to obtain additional funding and bring this new construction to life.”

The town of Groton has received other grants, such as a Department of Economic and Community Development Community Challenge Grant for over $6 million. In addition, Groton has received numerous grants through the National Fish and Wildlife Fund and DEEP focusing on sustainability, resiliency and preparedness for climate change and extreme storm events.


Anti-data center signs stolen from Waterford lawns, residents say

Daniel Drainville

Waterford ― Several residents who live in the Millstone Point and Great Neck Road neighborhoods say signs opposing the construction of a data center have been stolen from their yards.

Resident Liz Pezzi of Race Rock Road in Millstone Point said her sign and others in at least five other neighborhood yards had their signs taken. Meanwhile, residents reported graduation signs were untouched.

The data center signs, which state “No data center” imposed over a red circle with a line through it, are symbolic of some residents’ opposition to a plan by NE Edge to build a 1.2-million-square-foot data center on the Millstone Power Station site.

The Concerned Citizens of Waterford and East Lyme, a group that formed last summer to oppose the data center, have distributed the signs since April. The signs are prevalent in the neighborhood, where residents are concerned the data project would increase noise, decrease property values and damage the environment.

Police Lt. David Ferland said Monday the department is “unaware of any reports of stolen signs.”

But at Millstone Point, one of the neighborhoods nearest to the power station property, Pezzi and four other residents on Monday said that their signs were stolen around 11:30 p.m. on June 15, the night after a neighborhood-wide tag sale.

“When the people who stole the signs came, they would shine a bright flashlight into the Ring cameras,” she said. “So nobody who had the Ring camera on the houses they were stolen from could see who it was.”

Dennis and Laurie Sexton, of Millstone Road East, another road in Millstone Point, said that’s what they saw on their Ring camera, when they checked the footage the morning after.

They had two signs. One was stolen from heir yard but another was in their garage. The backup was staked in their yard Monday.

Kathy Pavlick, also of Race Rock Road, said her sign was stolen, too, as was one in her daughter’s yard on the same street.

Pezzi added that it’s sad that someone would steal the signs “for no reason,” adding they are free speech.

Meanwhile resident Wendall Turpin, of Great Neck Road, said signs were taken on his road as well on June 16 or 17.

“They took mine, my neighbors, the guy that lives maybe, seven houses down,” he said.

Residents whose signs were stolen said they didn’t file any police reports.

Pezzi, the Sextons and Pavlick said it wasn’t worth the effort over a sign. Pezzi added she felt like she didn’t have enough information to file a report.

Resident Bryan Sayles, a member of the concerned citizens group, said Monday the group will continue tracking the number of stolen signs and urged whoever is responsible to “stop it immediately.”

Pavlick said she is hoping the thefts “would make people more galvanized.”


Cleanup underway in Meriden so a 120-year old piano factory can become apartments

Mary Ellen Godin

MERIDEN — Environmental workers recently began clean up on the former Aeolian Organ and Music Co. factory as the first step in a $56 million housing development for 82 low and moderate-income families

The adaptive reuse project will convert a historic player piano factory at 85 Tremont St. into an apartment community and is expected to revitalize an under-utilized complex in the city's north end. Boston-based Trinity Financial is the project developer who secured local approvals and state housing and environmental grants to do a gut renovation of the 120-year-old factory. 

“Trinity Financial is excited to break ground on this mixed-income, adaptive reuse apartment project, showcasing the city of Meriden's commitment to affordable housing and community revitalization while putting a contaminated brownfield site back into productive use,” Trinity's vice president of development Don Drazen stated in a press release.

Drazen first identified the building as a potentially transformational project, and approached city officials in 2021. Trinity secured City Council approval in 2022 to move ahead with the redevelopment under the city's adaptive reuse overlay zone program that identified old and underutilized buildings for new development. 

Approximately 65 percent of the project's funding will come from low-income housing tax credit equity and federal and state historic tax equity. Last month, Trinity closed on $24.5 million from KeyBank, $13.4 million from the Connecticut Housing Finance Authority, $9.5 million from the state Department of Housing and $4 million from the state Department of Economic and Community Development, including $1.5 million in brownfield funding, officials said. 

The building is anticipated to have lead and asbestos contamination. The soil on the property is contaminated with volatile chlorinated organic solvents which were used to clean the machinery in the factory, then dumped on the property, according to Trinity representatives.

Among the neighborhood projects linked to this redevelopment is nearly a $2.5 million upgrade to the North End Field Little League complex on Britannia Street, which included the construction of two new turf ball fields, parking and enhancements for drainage and stormwater that were completed in 2023 and paid for through funds from the American Rescue Plan Act.

The other project, northwest of the existing fields, will convert two adjacent, overgrown city-owned lots into a small park which will include a playscape and space for a basketball court.

 “We are excited to see the revitalization of 85 Tremont moving forward," said Steven Cardillo, president of the North End Meriden Neighborhood Association. "This redeveloped building will serve as an anchor for North Meriden and complement the city’s investments in our neighborhood athletic fields, sports courts and playgrounds."

KeyBank Community Development Lending and Investment made a $27 million equity investment and nearly $25 million construction loan to Trinity’s 85 Tremont project, said Anna Belanger, KeyBank CDLI relationship manager.  

“Together, these initiatives represent a $58.5 million public-private investment poised to revitalize nearly an entire city block in North Meriden, fostering a more active, vibrant community,” said Meriden Economic Development Director Joe Feest. “We have had a great working relationship with Trinity and look forward to seeing this project completed.”

The 82 units are designed to meet a range of income levels. Fourteen units will be part of the federal Section 811 program with supportive services for households earning at or below 25 percent of the area median income, three units are for households at or below 30 percent AMI, 28 units are at or below 50 percent AMI, 12 units are at or below 60 percent of AMI, 14 units are at or below 80 percent AMI, and 11 are market-rate apartments.

The units will consist of a mix of one and two bedrooms. Earlier plans for three bedroom units were shelved by the Planning Department several months ago.

Amenities will include a community room, children's playroom, fitness center, and indoor bike storage, all within walking distance of local amenities and public transportation.

“Investment in affordable housing and community revitalization allows our Connecticut residents to live in high-quality housing with affordable rents,” Connecticut Housing Commissioner Seila Mosquera-Bruno said in prepared remarks. “Public-private partnerships that create more housing are also a smart approach to leverage finite public dollars and build key relationships for long-term sustainable collaborations to solve challenges affecting those that call Connecticut home.”

The building’s exterior will remain intact, while interior renovations will highlight original features, such as ceiling beams and sliding metal doors, developers said. Trinity Financial aims to secure Enterprise Green Communities certification for the project, focusing on sustainability through energy-efficient upgrades, including a new window system, high-efficiency HVAC, Energy Star appliances, LED lighting and solar panels on the roof.

City officials said upon the completion of the field project last year, it was a necessary revitalization of the local neighborhood which would be the first stepping stone for additional development.

"I'm excited to see all the games that are going to be played here," Scarpati said when the fields opened last year. "I'm excited to see the wins that our students are going to bring home to Meriden. I'm excited to see these stands filled with parents cheering on their students and their kids." 

The Aeolian Organ and Piano Co. factory was purpose-built in 1887 to manufacture player pianos and organs. After many decades of mergers and acquisitions, Aeolian was once the largest manufacturer of pianos and organs in America. The 1910s saw the company move into records and phonographs with the rise in music recording technology.

Player pianos became increasingly sophisticated during the years of their popularity. Meriden's Wilcox & White Co. had years of prosperity from the late 1870s to the First World War.

"After the war, the company lured many famous piano artists to studios at the piano factory on Cambridge and Griswold streets to make paper roll recordings," according to a piece by opinion page editor Jeffery Kurz in 2000.

"The process was intricate and aggressively patented to protect the company's products from imitators," Kurz wrote.

Among the innovations was the Angelus, a cabinet rolled up to a piano that contained 88 mechanical fingers that corresponded to the keys on a piano.

The city rates higher in its percentage of affordable housing than many other towns in the state, at 16 percent. While the city has sought to slow or halt the number of affordable housing projects in its downtown, there is still a need for affordable housing in other parts of the city. The Tremont Street project is well outside the downtown area and on several bus lines, officials said.

But the number of two-bedroom or more units now in the city's development pipeline led to concerns over added stress on the schools and public services. School officials last year asked city zoning officials to reconsider variances and zone changes that would lead to more apartments. 

Those efforts were thwarted by attorneys and housing advocates who said any type of housing moratorium would be illegal.  

"If they were building 3,000-square-foot homes, nobody would be calling for a moratorium" land use attorney Dennis Ceneviva said at the time. 

Trinity Financial has developed projects in Massachusetts, New York and Norwalk. They manage the Rowe Apartment Complex in New Haven through their subsidiary, Trinity Management.



June 21, 2024

CT Construction Digest Friday June 21, 2024

Norwich Public Utilities making major improvements to its drinking water system

Claire Bessette

Norwich ― Norwich Public Utilities is taking advantage of unprecedented increases in federal grant support to launch several water system improvement projects.

These including upgrading water tanks, installing a major water line and locating any remaining lead lines to customer homes.

The utility needed City Council approval Monday to increase financing for two projects and add a new plan to repair the city’s main water line that brings water from the Deep River reservoir and treatment plant in Lebanon into Norwich.

The federal bipartisan infrastructure law provided funding to the federal Environmental Protection Agency, which sends Connecticut’s share to the state Department of Public Health. DPH provides grants and low-cost loans through the Drinking Water State Revolving Fund, NPU spokesman Chris Riley said.

NPU General Manager Chris LaRose said the loan costs already are built into current rates, so no rate increases will be needed. No city tax money will be used for the projects.

Because of delays in obtaining approvals, costs have escalated on the planned aeration upgrades to the 250,000-gallon water tank on Richard Brown Drive in Montville and the 670,000-gallon tank in the Stanley Israelite Norwich Business Park. Each project increased from $1.8 million to $2 million.

The water tank projects will receive 30% grant funding and a 70% loan from the drinking water fund. Riley said in the past, such projects would only qualify for 6% to 8% grant portions, so it makes sense to pursue the big projects now.

NPU received approval from the council for a new $2.9 million repair to the major water line that runs from Lebanon through Bozrah into Norwich. The line crosses a bridge just below the troublesome Fitchville Dam in Bozrah, where cracks and leaks during flooding on Jan. 10 prompted an emergency evacuation order and led to emergency measures to protect the dam.

LaRose said NPU already has repaired damage to the earth supporting the water line caused by the flood.

The project will address corrosion to the steel on a 100-foot-long utility bridge that braces the 30-inch water main beneath the Fitchville Road bridge over the Yantic River just below the dam. Construction is expected to start in fall of 2025, with 20% grant and 80% loan funding, LaRose said.

NPU discovered some good news pertaining to the final planned water project. In a 2023 survey of water lines from streets into residential homes, NPU officials had expected to find hundreds of old remaining lead and copper lines. Instead, only four lead pipes were discovered.

“Back in 1980s, NPU replaced all lead lines in the streets, but we were not allowed to touch customer-owned lines (from the street into homes),” LaRose said. “We’re finding that many owners had them replaced on their own without recording it.”

Even so, the City Council agreed to allow NPU to increase funding from $500,000 to $2 million to verify the makeup of residential water lines into homes to discover any additional lead pipes. Inspections are planned to verify the materials in 340 lines, including 170 that will require basement inspections.

The additional water line surveys are funded through an 80% grant and 20% loan. The survey results are due to the state in October, LaRose said.


Public invited to weigh in on Gold Star Memorial Bridge sidewalk proposal

John Penney

New London ― The public is invited to comment Monday on a state plan to improve pedestrian and cyclist access to the Gold Star Memorial Bridge.

The state Department of Transportation will host a presentation and question-and-answer session at 7 p.m. at New London City Hall, 181 State St., related to planned improvements to the Interstate 95 southbound bridge sidewalk.

The project calls for widening the existing 5-foot-wide sidewalk, along with the east and west approaches to the bridge. A spur path will be added connecting to Williams Street in New London. The Bridge Street intersection in Groton will also be reconfigured to allow for easier bridge access.

The $55.5 million project, tentatively slated to begin in 2028, will be 90% funded with federal funds and the remainder covered with state money.

The in-person meeting will also be available via Zoom. Registration for the virtual public information meeting is at https://portal.ct.gov/DOTGoldStar94-267VPIM. Registration is required to participate virtually.

Members of the public can submit comments and questions during the two-week public comment period after the meeting. Comments and questions can be submitted by July 8 to DOT.GoldStarBridgeProjects@ct.gov or (860) 594-2020.


Norwalk signs off officially on $47M in renovations at Jefferson School amid a wave of construction

Kalleen Rose Ozanic

NORWALK — Renovations at Jefferson Marine Science Elementary School are officially complete, improving the building with an updated gymnasium, cafeteria and kitchen, among other upgrades.

The school district unveiled the $47 million project two years ago with a ribbon-cutting ceremony, but documents now reflect the renovate-as-new project is officially complete, according to Nick Dua, communications and marketing director for Norwalk Public Schools.

The “complete interior renovation” also upgraded the main office and administration areas of the school and all of the classrooms.The cafeteria often houses school board workshops that bring in members of the community.

“The site was modified to improve the arrivals and drop-off at the school with a new separate bus loop and parent drop off area installed,” according to a document Construction Solutions Group, the contractor, sent to the Board of Education to request approval for the completion of the project.

Despite the ribbon-cuttting in 2022, the close-out this month hinged on the district's retainage Construction Solutions Group, the project's contactor. A retainage is a portion of payment withheld until all work is complete.

"Retainage includes, but not limited to punch list items and warrantee items," Dua said in an email Tuesday. "It is not out of the ordinary to see these items completed (two years) after (move-in) date especially on a ($47 million) project like Jefferson."

The school board approved the completed renovations unanimously at its regular board meeting on June 4. Now that the project is officially complete, the state can reimburse the district for its share of the project cost, Dua said.

The Jefferson renovations come amid a wave of upgrades across the district.

Norwalk Public Schools closed out on the construction of the Cranbury School’s new campus just before school started, broke ground on the new South Norwalk School and Norwalk High School in April, and last month secured $21.5 million in state grant funding to update or replace heating, air conditioning and ventilation units across the district.


144,000-sq.ft. warehouse proposed in Manchester

Skyler Frazer

Amore than 144,000-square-foot warehouse has been proposed in Manchester along the East Hartford town line, according to town documents.

Luzern Associates LLC, a Greenwich-based real estate investment firm with another office in Boston, recently submitted applications to construct a 144,074-square-foot distribution center at 71 and 81 Commerce Road. The group is seeking an inland wetland permit, special-use exception and approval of an erosion and sediment control plan.

The property is 19.98 acres and plans call for 28 loading docks, two drive-in doors, 15 trailer storage spaces and 127 parking spaces in addition to the warehouse and distribution center.

No tenants are listed in the project application.

The parcel has industrial properties to the east and south, residential properties to the west in East Hartford and interstate 291 to the north. According to plans submitted by developers, the project’s design was done in consideration of the residential properties on the west side of the property by placing the loading docks on the east side and setting back the building at least 150 feet with natural buffers like trees and shrubbery planned.

With applications officially submitted to the town’s Planning and Economic Development Department, municipal staff will now prepare their own report about the project ahead of the next Planning and Zoning Commission meeting.