Date: Fri 22-Mar-1996
Date: Fri 22-Mar-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
Borough-Zoning-Hawley-School
Full Text:
Borough Zoning Approves Hawley School Plans
B Y A NDREW G OROSKO
The Borough Zoning Commission has approved site plans for the expansion of
Hawley School.
Commission members approved the $3.5-million project March 14 after listening
to a presentation on the construction plans by school officials and expansion
project designers.
Board of Education Chairman Herbert Rosenthal told the zoners expanding Hawley
School is "essential" to the public school system in light of an increasing
student enrollment.
Having a larger Hawley School would let the town "buy time" until it would
have to pursue the construction of another elementary school, he said.
Architect Rusty Malik of Kaestle Boos Associates of New Britain said the
proposed addition would add approximately 22,000 square feet of space to the
building, which opened in 1921. Hawley School once served as the town's high
school.
The construction project would provide six new classrooms, plus gymnasium, art
and media facilities for Hawley School students, Mr Malik said.
Hawley School sits on a congested, heavily used site at 29 Church Hill Road,
so the project's designers are proposing some site changes there.
The plans call for modified school bus and automobile traffic patterns
intended to improve public safety.
All windows in the existing school and the proposed expansion would be
replaced with new windows to provide a sense of architectural unity, he said.
Landscape architect Dick Webb of Richter, Cegan and Webb, the Avon firm which
did site planning for the project, said the current, tight 49-space parking
lot at the school would expand to 61 spaces. Also, paved space for an
additional 22 vehicles would be provided for "overflow parking," bringing
total parking to 82 spaces, if needed. The 22 added spaces would serve as a
children's play area when not used for parking.
The three athletic fields behind the school would remain intact, Mr Webb said.
Mr Webb said the site changes proposed for the Hawley School property amount
to "a significant improvement."
Under the school board's plans for the Hawley school property, the existing
septic system would be demolished. The school's sewage would be sent to a
holding tank where it would be contained and frequently emptied until the
school is connected to the town's sewer system now under construction. The
sewer system is planned to be in operation by late 1997.
In reviewing the Hawley School expansion proposal, Fire Marshal George
Lockwood and Newtown Hook and Ladder Fire Chief Steve Murphy recommend that a
fire hydrant be installed in front of the school.
Borough Engineer Ronald Bolmer recommends that a drainage pipe planned for the
property be increased in diameter from 12 inches to 15 inches to provide
higher storm drainage capacity.
Kathleen Purches, the town's environmental health director, reviewed the plans
for the project. In a letter to the borough zoners, she wrote she doesn't
object to the project as proposed, but recommends that the expanded school
contain a full food service facility.
As now planned, the project calls for warming ovens to heat lunches
transported to Hawley School from the nearby Newtown Middle School. Hawley
students would continue eating lunches in their classrooms in the expanded
school.
The Hawley School expansion proposal will be subject to voters' action at an
upcoming referendum, tentatively scheduled for June.