Date: Fri 14-Nov-1997
Date: Fri 14-Nov-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
P&Z-Sand-Hill-Plaza-video
Full Text:
Bid Renewed For New Building At Sand Hill Plaza
BY ANDREW GOROSKO
R2D Corporation has returned to the Planning and Zoning Commission (P&Z) with
more detailed plans for its proposed 6,000-square-foot freestanding store in
the parking lot of Sand Hill Plaza on South Main Street.
R2D of Hartford had submitted plans for the project to the P&Z last August,
but withdrew them after P&Z members determined the proposal lacked adequate
technical details. R2D is seeking a special exception to the zoning
regulations for the building which might house a video store.
The owner of the property is DD Newtown Partners, Limited Partnership, a
corporation chartered in Delaware. The plaza is managed by The Hutensky Group,
a shopping center management firm.
Besides constructing a 6,000-square-foot store, DD Newtown Partners wants to
expand the plaza's parking lot to make up for some of the parking spaces lost
to building construction, and also to provide more convenient parking for the
section of the plaza which formerly held Superstar Sports, Picaso Restaurant,
and Duchess of Newtown.
The plaza now holds 1,065 parking spaces. If the changes are made, there would
be a net loss of 21 spaces.
In his report on the development proposal, Zoning Enforcement Officer William
Nicholson said the applicant is seeking two wall signs for the proposed retail
building, but the zoning regulations allow only one such sign. Also, the
applicant is seeking more area covered with signage than allowed by the
regulations, Mr Nicholson reported.
The town health department noted that the wastewater disposal plans for the
proposed building require approval by the state Department of Environmental
Protection (DEP). The plaza is served by a small self-contained sewer system
to which the new building would be connected. Such small sewer systems are
monitored by DEP.
Attorney Robert Hall, representing R2D Corporation at a November 6 public
hearing, said the store would be erected in a section of the parking lot
little used for parking by shoppers. It is the area lying east of the General
Nutrition Center.
Mr Hall said he believes the applicant has resolved the technical deficiencies
of the initial submission. The town's zoning regulations concerning the
minimum number of parking spaces required for commercial areas generally
exceed what is realistically needed for parking, Mr Hall said. Mr Hall
provided P&Z members with numerous color photos of the Sand Hill Plaza parking
lot to illustrate his points on parking.
Architect Arnold Gans of New Haven provided P&Z members with renderings of the
building which would be constructed. The structure is designed to house a
single commercial tenant, he said.
The building would be built of the same materials used to construct the plaza,
he said. The structure's size, colors and roofing treatment would be similar
to what is at the plaza, he added. The structure DD Partners wants to build
would be visually consistent with the existing plaza, he said.
Because the building would be freestanding and surrounded by parking areas on
all four sides, all faces of the building would be finished off, and there
would be no obvious back end of the store, he said.
Eve Barakos-Landino of Barakos-Landino, Inc, of Hamden, presented a study on
how building another structure at the plaza would affect area traffic flow.
Adding a new store would not change the "level of service," Ms Barakos-Landino
said. A level of service reflects an intersection's ability to handle traffic
flow.
Sand Hill Plaza typically has many empty parking spaces, she said.
Although a shopping center trade group recommends that there be one parking
space for every 1,000 square feet of commercial area at a shopping center, if
the applicant's plans are approved, there would be 5.6 spaces per 1,000 square
feet of store area, she said.
Engineer Larry Marsiglio, representing R2D Corporation, said the existing
small sewage treatment plant at Sand Hill Plaza can handle added wastewater
flow from a new store.
P&Z member James Boylan asked the applicant why DD Newtown Partners does not
use existing vacant commercial space at the plaza in the mini-mall for a new
tenant.
Robert Dombi of The Hutensky Group, the property's management and leasing
firm, said the company is seeking tenants to occupy vacant space in the
plaza's mini-mall. An entryway to the mini-mall lies between the empty
commercial spaces formerly occupied by Duchess Restaurant and Picaso
Restaurant.
The largest available commercial space in the mini-mall is only 3,500 square
feet, Mr Dombi said.
The Hutensky Group has a letter of intent with an undisclosed potential tenant
for occupancy of the proposed 6,000-square-foot building, Mr Dombi said.
In explaining the application for a freestanding building in August, Mr Dombi
said a business such as a video rental store must provide customers with a
high level of convenience, plus easy access and egress.
The tenant of a new building would be able to cancel its lease if the Super
Stop & Shop supermarket should close, Mr Dombi has said, noting that the
supermarket would serve as a "draw" to attract customers to a new video store.
A new tenant at Sand Hill Plaza would want to be physically closer to the
supermarket than the mini-mall allows, thus resulting in the request for a
visible freestanding building in the parking lot, he said.
Mr Dombi said plaza management has had no luck in creating business interest
in a past proposed 21,450-square-foot addition for which former plaza owner
Sand Hill Limited Partnership had gained P&Z approval.
In December 1995, Sand Hill Limited Partnership sold the plaza for $20 million
to DD Newtown Partners. The sale was transacted through DD Newtown Partners'
financial arm known as DRA Advisors, Inc, of Manhattan. FDP Newtown, Inc, a
Connecticut-chartered corporation, is a general partner of DD Newtown
Partners.
Although the application to build the 6,000-square-foot building was the
subject of a public hearing November 6, no member of the public commented on
the proposal.
P&Z members are expected to act on the application at an upcoming session.
