Date: Fri 07-Mar-1997
Date: Fri 07-Mar-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: KAAREN
Quick Words:
Newtown-Savings-Bank-expansion
Full Text:
Savings Bank Unveils Plan For Main Street Expansion
B Y K AAREN V ALENTA
Newtown Savings Bank and the Newtown Congregational Church have filed an
application with the Borough Zoning Board of Appeals for variances needed to
expand the bank's headquarters on Main Street. A hearing will be held by the
ZBA at 7:30 pm Wednesday, March 26, in the Lower Meeting Room of Edmond Town
Hall.
Faced with the need for more space and a desire to stay on Main Street, the
bank last spring offered to buy the church's property at 41 Main Street for
$550,000. The 5.38-acre property includes the old parsonage, the
13,980-square-foot church house, and a tiny house at the rear of the property.
The offer is contingent, however, on approval by the Borough ZBA of the
expansion plans.
"This has been a long time in coming," said bank president John Martocci. "The
bank has been on Main Street since 1855, and we want to keep that tradition
going. If we can do this expansion, it will allow us to stay here a very long
time."
Mr Martocci said many of the bank's operations and personnel have been moved
to Southbury, Woodbury and the branch office in the Sand Hill Plaza in the
years since 1985 because of lack of space as the bank's services continued to
grow.
"It's extremely inconvenient and expensive for us to be so spread apart," he
said. "This expansion will allow us to bring 16 employees back to Main Street
from Southbury, create three new jobs, and add to Newtown's tax base with all
the new people and computers - and because what was [exempt] church property
will be taxed as commercial property."
Since last May, architects, engineers, traffic consultants and other
specialists have been studying the properties and the surrounding
neighborhood. The biggest hurdle in the expansion has been the old parsonage,
a circa 1815, two-story frame house that the bank wanted to renovate.
"Structural engineers have told us that it can't be done safely," Mr Martocci
said. "The house is structurally not sound. The foundation is gravel - almost
powder."
So, instead of a renovation project, engineers recommended that the house be
torn down and an exact duplicate of the exterior of the house, as it
originally was built, be constructed on the site.
"We even plan to restore the second chimney [on the house], which we
discovered in a photo taken around 1955 but which has since been removed," Mr
Martocci said. "The exterior will be the same - to maintain its historical
Main Street appearance - but the interior will be offices."
Build An Addition
The existing parsonage garage will be removed and an addition will be built to
connect the parsonage with the bank.
"The addition will be set back and heavily landscaped," Mr Martocci said. "It
will appear to be one-story but actually is two stories because of the slope
of the property away from the street."
The 1,212-square-foot house located near the rear of the church property,
built about 1955, will be removed. Parking will be increased from the current
55 spaces to 70, with another 21 to be added later.
"When we get done, we will have two buildings on the combined lots, where
there currently are four structures," Mr Martocci said.
He said that if the plans are approved, and the bank buys the property, then
two- to three-acres at the rear of the church property will be placed into a
land trust and will not be available for future development. "This is for the
benefit of our neighbors," he explained.
The bank also will join the Newtown Historic District after the property is
purchased but before the expansion work begins, he added.
The bank intends to lease the three-story church house back to the church for
five years with an option for an additional five years, providing time for the
church to build a new church house on its property on West Street.
The old church house, which was built in 1948, then will be used for bank
operations, but it probably also will contain rental office space and a
community room for local organizations to use, Mr Martocci said. Currently,
the building houses a nursery school and the Newtown Youth Services offices.
Is is also used for church activities and for evening meetings of groups like
Alcoholics Anonymous.
Hardship Variance Needed
To implement its plans, the bank needs a hardship variance, which would allow
business-use on the residentially zone church property and multiple uses on
the combined church and bank property. A variance also will be needed because
the 91 parking spaces that will eventually be created still will be 35 less
than the borough regulations require.
"We expect the increase in parking spaces to help the traffic problem on Main
Street," Mr Martocci said. "But, we are limited by wetlands from creating a
much larger parking area at the rear of the property."
A variance also may be needed to permit a drive-up teller window at the rear
of the bank. A one-way driveway will be constructed between the former
parsonage and the church house to access the drive-up window.
An existing narrow driveway that extends from Main Street past the parsonage
and the church house to the rear of the lot will be widened to meet code but
will be a one-way entrance, Mr Martocci said. The cement steps that lead from
the property to the Edmond Town Hall parking lot will be replaced for the
convenience of residents who park in the bank's lot for movies and other
events during non-banking hours, he added.
The existing bank building, which was constructed in 1909, enlarged in 1935,
and renovated in 1963, 1975 and 1987, will be renovated again. An elevator
will be constructed to make the bank completely handicapped accessible for the
first time.
Mr Martocci estimated that it will cost "something between $1.3 million and
$1.5 million" to buy the church property, remove the two residences, rebuild
the parsonage and construct the addition, rebuild and pave the driveways,
expand the parking, rebuild the cement steps and remove a buried heating oil
tank.
Additional money will be spent later for the 21-space parking lot, which will
be created in what is now the nursery school's playground and for any eventual
renovations within the church house.
Renovations within the existing bank may be an additional $300,000 to
$400,000, Mr Martocci said.
The bank, which has 82 employees, has seven offices: two in Newtown, two in
Bethel, plus Monroe, Southbury and Woodbury. Twenty-six people work in the
Main Street location. The bank's accounting, operations, deposit services,
personnel and the president's office currently are housed in the Pomperaug
Office Park in Southbury. The bank's training center is at its Woodbury branch
location, and some of its central office personnel are located at the Sand
Hill Plaza in Newtown.
"We're planning to expand to include a business-lending division for
commercial and industrial customers," Mr Martocci said. "If I add a new
business, where do I put the staff?"
"The town wants to preserve Main Street as it looks now," he acknowledged. "I
think we're doing that - improving Main Street while keeping the historic
look."
He said the bank hired the architectural firm Business Environs of Rocky Hill
because it did a bank expansion in Massachusetts that involved many of the
same issues. The firm also did historic renovations in Hartford and Westport
and is a specialist in bank operations, he said.
Referring to a booklet produced in 1955 to celebrate the bank's 100th
anniversary, Mr Martocci read: "The Newtown Savings Bank was here on Main
Street in 1855 serving your forefathers; it is here on Main Street in 1955
serving you and it is safe to forecast that the bank will be here in 2055
serving your descendants."
"That says it exactly," Mr Martocci said.
