Date: Fri 15-Aug-1997
Date: Fri 15-Aug-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
Fairfield-Hills-Nuclo-Andersen
Full Text:
State Hires Firm To Help Decide Best Use Of Fairfield Hills
BY ANDREW GOROSKO
The state has hired a consulting firm to help it decide the best uses for the
650-acre Fairfield Hills campus.
Richard Nuclo, head of state assets management for the state Office of Policy
and Management (OPM), said Tuesday Arthur Andersen & Company, SC, a major
consulting firm, has been hired to help determine the "highest and best use"
of the sprawling property.
In December 1995, the state Department of Mental Health (DMH) ended operations
at Fairfield Hills
Fairfield Hills formerly served as a state psychiatric hospital that housed
about 3,500 patients at its height. The state closed the hospital as the DMH
pursued its policy of patient "deinstitutionalization."
Since the closure, state and town officials have been pondering the best
long-term uses for the facility, which holds more than 100 buildings that
enclose 1.65 million square feet of space. Of those buildings, 7 are listed in
excellent condition, 58 in good condition, 39 in fair condition and 7 are in
poor condition.
The state wants to sell Fairfield Hills, Mr Nuclo said. If that's not
possible, it would lease it. A third choice is some combination of selling and
leasing sections of it, Mr Nuclo said.
OPM mailed out more than 100 "requests for proposals" to consulting firms
seeking an organization that can effectively help decide the best future uses
for the property, Mr Nuclo said. OPM narrowed down the responses to those from
six firms. Of the six firms which were interviewed, Andersen Consulting was
selected to do the job, he said, adding that the firm will be paid $148,500
for the study.
Because the state isn't in the business of studying the best future uses for
real estate and buildings it no longer needs or wants, it decided to hire a
firm that's able to do such work, Mr Nuclo said.
In starting its study, the consultants will review environmental concerns,
mapping, water resources and sewage disposal, among other matters, he said.
Factors such as the condition of the many buildings at Fairfield Hills and the
site's location over the area's sole source aquifer will be taken into account
in planning potential land uses.
After sufficient information on the property is collected and organized, the
consultants will perform a "highest and best use analysis," Mr Nuclo said.
It's expected the consultants will produce three or four options for future
uses of Fairfield Hills from which the state and town will decide which
direction to take.
A property marketing strategy will be developed and an implementation plan
formulated, Mr Nuclo said. A preliminary report is expected by next spring.
Andersen will use the services of a property reuse planning subcontractor.
The consultants will consider the practicality of various future land uses,
keeping in mind uses which are economically viable, Mr Nuclo said.
"Fairfield Hills is a fairly large campus.... There are a lot of options for
us out there," he said.
The state Department of Transportation (DOT) is interested in building a road
salt storage shed somewhere on the Fairfield Hills campus, Mr Nuclo noted.
In its 1994 report, the Fairfield Hills Task Force recommended preserving open
space at Fairfield Hills, expanding recreational uses, reusing certain
buildings for administrative office space, using existing buildings for
economic development, encouraging an educational presence there, providing
affordable housing, and expanding the local stock of housing for the elderly.
After the task force completed its study, the Fairfield Hills Implementation
Oversight Committee was formed. That committee's work led to the hiring of
Andersen.
The town has accepted more than 22 acres and two buildings at Fairfield Hills
from the state as part of a 1991 legal settlement stemming from the town suing
the state over the construction of Garner Correctional Institution.
Currently, the town uses Canaan House at Fairfield Hills for the town offices
formerly housed at Town Hall South. Also, the Booth Library is temporarily
housed in Shelton House. Addiction Prevention Therapy (APT), a private drug
and alcohol treatment program, is housed in Greenwich House. The private
Merryhill Child Care Center is located on state property at 49 Queen Street.
The state plans to sell more than a dozen small houses it owns on the
Fairfield Hills grounds. About 200 acres at Fairfield Hills has been reserved
as state-owned open space.
