Date: Fri 20-Dec-1996
Date: Fri 20-Dec-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
Hawley-Inn-Borough-ZBA
Full Text:
Borough ZBA Allows Outdoor Dining At Renovated Hawley Inn
B Y A NDREW G OROSKO
The Borough Zoning Board of Appeals has approved a request for a zoning
variance from Hawley Inn, LLC, to let it have outdoor dining facilities at the
inn which now is under renovation and slated to reopen.
Appeals board members approved the request to permit the use of a porch at the
inn for seasonal dining. The inn is located at 19 Main Street in a residential
zone.
The inn has been closed in recent years. It is now undergoing a major
renovation intended to have the historic structure meet applicable building
codes.
In granting the zoning variance, appeals board members placed two conditions
on the approval.
Any audio provided for diners on the inn's porch shall only be background
music. If outdoor furniture and sun umbrellas are used on the porch, those
items must be of similar design and color.
The appeals board unanimously approved the variance for Hawley Inn, LLC, last
week. Voting in favor of it were members James Crick, Janet Woycik, Patrick
Hill, Jeffrey Hilgert, and John Madzula.
The historic restaurant, to be doing business under the name The Mary Hawley
Inn, is expected to reopen for business sometime in February. The owners had
hoped to be open by this month, but delays have postponed the opening.
Hawley Inn, LLC, of Newtown purchased the building on Main Street from Lowell
Hodgkiss Associates Inc of Trumbull in August for $475,000. Construction
financing was provided by Nutmeg Federal Savings & Loan.
Philip Manger, who lives on Taunton Lake Road and Richard Mullen of Great
Quarter Road, Sandy Hook, are principals in Hawley Inn LLC.
A real estate closing on the property was delayed until August due to liens
against the property which had to be settled before the sale could take place.
As part of the sale, Lowell Hodgkiss Associates took back a $425,000 mortgage.
The property, which was operated for many years by the Vazanno family of
Stratford, is assessed at $443,000.
The facade of the wing known as Carriage House will be restored to closely
resemble its original appearance, including a working lit clock. It will
contain three suites for overnight guests. The building will be painted white,
and will have black window shutters.
Most of the changes to the building will be in the main building's interior.
There will be a tearoom with a fireplace; an English pub-style taproom with a
U-shaped bar; a 110-seat dining room; an 800-square-foot, second-story dining
porch; and a new restaurant kitchen.
Built in the 1820s, the inn was the home of Cyrenius H. Booth. The house was
gutted when it was remodeled twice, once in 1870 by the Hawley family, and
again in 1930 when it became an inn.
The Borough of Newtown Historic District Commission approved plans for the
inn's renovation last summer.
