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Date: Fri 26-Sep-1997

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Date: Fri 26-Sep-1997

Publication: Bee

Author: ANDYG

Quick Words:

P&Z-Riverview-affordable

Full Text:

P&Z Sets Hearing On Riverview Condos

BY ANDREW GOROSKO

The Planning and Zoning Commission (P&Z) has scheduled a public hearing on

Riverview Condominiums, a 49-unit housing complex proposed for Botsford, for

Thursday, October 2.

The hearing is slated for 8 pm at the town land use office, Canaan House, 4

Fairfield Circle South, Fairfield Hills. A P&Z business meeting at 7:30 pm

will precede the hearing.

Riverview Condominiums is a proposal to build 49 condos in Botsford on

Washbrook Road off South Main Street, behind Sand Hill Plaza.

Developers R&G Riverview Associates, LLC, want to build 49 units in three

construction phases. Thirteen of those units would be designated as

"affordable housing." The applicant is seeking a special exception to the

zoning regulations for the complex.

Riverview is the second affordable housing project proposed for town, the

first being Newtown Village, which has been proposed for land adjacent to Exit

11 of Interstate 84 in Sandy Hook. The Newtown Village developers are

proposing 96 individual houses, 24 of which would be designated as affordable

housing.

As a condition of approving water storage facilities for firefighting at

Riverview, Fire Marshal George Lockwood is requiring the developers to provide

an independent firefighting study on how to fight fires there and what

equipment would be needed to do so. Also, the fire marshal is requiring a

second access to the site, the addition of some fire hydrants, and the

provision of fire lanes.

At a recent selectmen's meeting, the developers agreed to improve a length of

Washbrook Road extending to Cold Spring Road for a second access to the site.

The developers have received tentative approval from the state Department of

Environmental Protection (DEP) for discharging wastewater at the site into a

large community septic system.

In a traffic study for the project, Irving Chann of IK Chann Associates of

Wilton states that in 1995, 16,800 vehicles traveled daily on South Main

Street past the Washbrook Road site. The 850 feet of dirt roadway between

South Main Street and the proposed complex would be paved. The complex would

generate 322 vehicle trips daily, according to Mr Chann. A stop sign would be

posted on Washbrook Road at its intersection with South Main Street to control

traffic. The development "will have no adverse impact on any nearby area

roads," according to Mr Chann, who represents the developers.

According to documents submitted by the developers, the maximum allowable sale

price for an affordable housing condominium unit at Riverview would be

$146,600. The prices of market value condos are unclear.

The complex would be constructed in three phases, with 17 units in the first

phase and 16 units in each of the two following phases. Five affordable units

would be built in the first phase and eight affordable units in the second

phase, with no affordable units built in the third phase.

The annual family income ceiling for a family of four to buy an affordable

condo would be $48,640. Affordable units must be owner-occupied.

The site would have parking for 135 vehicles. Forty-nine parking spaces would

be located inside 49 garages. There would be 49 spaces near garages, plus an

additional 37 spaces.

The complex would hold two 2-unit buildings, three 3-unit buildings, and nine

4-unit buildings.

Site plans depict the 14 buildings arrayed in semicircle overlooking the

Pootatuck River. A spur of buildings would extend off the semicircle pointed

away from the river.

The contemporary-style units would have basements, decks, patios and porches.

The floor area of the various units would be 1,200, 1,280, 1,400, and 1,550

square feet.

In June, Conservation Commission members unanimously granted the developers a

wetlands construction permit for Riverview.

That commission's routine handling of the Riverview application came in sharp

contrast to the many criticisms of the Newtown Village proposal at past

Conservation Commission meetings. The Conservation Commission held numerous

meetings at which residents living near the Newtown Village site criticized

the proposal on environmental grounds before the commission granted a wetlands

construction permit to Newtown Village in February. Newtown Village is now

pending before the P&Z.

In granting R&G Riverview, LLC, a construction permit, Conservation Commission

members are allowing the developers to make site improvements in an upland

area adjacent to a wetland and watercourse.

The developers plan to use a community septic system to serve the 49 units. It

would handle up to 14,700 gallons of wastewater daily.

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