Date: Fri 04-Oct-1996
Date: Fri 04-Oct-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
business-Alagna-motel
Full Text:
with cut: A New Business Challenge For A Local Official
With planning work on Newtown's municipal sewer system winding down, Water
Pollution Control Authority (WPCA) Chairman Peter Alagna says he is pursuing a
new challenge.
Mr Alagna, who has headed the town's water pollution agency for the past 17
years, is formulating plans for the redevelopment of the former Manor Brook
Motel on Mill Plain Road in Danbury. He intends to move his delicatessen and
gourmet foods business to the site, as well as be a landlord to other
businesses there.
Milano's Deli & Gourmet Shop is now located in the North Street Shopping
Center in Danbury, but deteriorating conditions at the shopping center and
rising rents have caused him to look elsewhere to expand his business, Mr
Alagna said.
Besides his deli and gourmet shop, Mr Alagna plans to operate a trattoria,
bar, and coffee shop in the main building at 89 Mill Plain Road. Other
buildings on the site would house shops selling items including gifts,
antiques, greeting cards, and fresh and dried flowers, according to Mr Alagna.
Cappiello Jewelers also plans to locate there. The property will have eight
bed-and-breakfast units in refurbished cottages. The project is now making its
way through Danbury's land use review process, Mr Alagna said.
Mr Alagna said he liked the Mill Plain Road site so much when he first saw
last fall that he bought it without hesitation. He had been looking for a site
for three years.
The WPCA chairman plans to expand the lines of goods he sells, noting that the
space he will occupy is more than twice as large as his current quarters.
Fresh meat, fresh fish, produce, and prepared foods will be offered.
He plans to create two ponds on a brook which runs across the site and install
vertical fountains as a landscaping touch.
"It's been a year in the development," Mr Alagna said of his plans. He said he
hopes to have Manor Brook Village in operation in about six months.
"What I really want to create is an oasis from the hustle and bustle of the
business world" for patrons of the planned facility, he said.
