Date: Fri 22-Nov-1996
Date: Fri 22-Nov-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
Newtown-Village-affordable
Full Text:
Affordable Housing Plans To Be Resubmitted Soon
B Y A NDREW G OROSKO
D&H Homes, LLC, of New Milford, and Fairfield 2000 Homes, Corp, of Stamford,
soon plan to submit a new application to the Conservation Commission for the
proposed Newtown Village housing complex.
John Horton, D&H's manager, said Wednesday the new application for wetlands
construction work will be submitted either November 22 or 25.
In the face of strong opposition to their controversial proposal to build 100
single-family houses in Sandy Hook, the developers of Newtown Village withdrew
their initial application to the Conservation Commission after a public
hearing on November 13.
The developers are seeking Conservation Commission approval to alter wetlands
on the 32-acre parcel where they want to build 100 homes, 25 of which would be
designated as "affordable housing." The former sand-and-gravel mine lies
within the area bounded by Berkshire Road, Bishop Circle, Philo Curtis Road,
and the eastbound on-ramp at Interchange-11 of Interstate-84.
The applicants withdrew their "short form" application to the Conservation
Commission, saying they will resubmit a "long form" application as was
requested by people living near the development. Another public hearing on the
wetlands work is expected on December 11.
The new application to be submitted will contain essentially the same
information as the initial application, according to Mr Horton.
An engineer and soil scientist presented detailed explanations of the wetlands
work the applicants want to do on the site to the Conservation Commission
November 13. The work involves building a road crossing over an intermittent
watercourse and doing some filling and grading work.
Considering the site, an "insignificant" amount of wetlands construction is
proposed, according to the developers.
The developers presented information on Newtown Village to a meeting of the
Newtown Board of Realtors on Wednesday.
JoAnn Maurer, board president, said D&H and Fairfield 2000 made an excellent
and very informative presentation, explained much to the realtors about
Newtown Village.
"We all felt it was extremely informative," she said.
The developers want to build detached, cluster-style housing ranging in size
from 1,300 to 2,200 square feet to be marketed in the $140,000 to $200,000
price range. The "market value homes" priced nearer $200,000 subsidize the
"affordable homes" priced nearer $140,000, giving the developers a financial
incentive to build "affordable housing."
"This type of housing will provide: a step up for those people now occupying
attached condominiums; the ownership opportunity for first-time home buyers
that have been priced out of traditional single-family subdivisions; and a
simpler lifestyle for those people whose children are grown," according to the
developers.
The developers want to use five home styles and employ reconfigured floor
plans and facades so that the homes look similar, but aren't identical. Front
porches and Victorian design elements would be used. The houses would be
positioned to provide the maximum amount of space between adjacent homes,
according to D&H and Fairfield 2000.
Environmental Concerns
More than 20 percent of the site would have impervious surfaces such as
pavement and roofs, according to Christopher Smith, a lawyer who represents
several nearby residents who oppose Newtown Village. Almost all rain hitting
those impervious surfaces would run off them, he said. That runoff carrying
contaminants from the developed area would enter wetlands on the site and
eventually get into area groundwater and the Pootatuck Aquifer, damaging the
quality of the underground drinking water source, he said.
Mr Smith has termed the construction project "a very aggressive and
overdeveloped proposal."
According to Barbara Obeda, an environmental analyst hired by the neighbors,
having a community septic system serving 100 houses on the site would have
negative effects on groundwater quality. She has termed the development
proposal "environmentally suicidal." Considering the soil types present at the
site, it's a poor location for high-density development, according to Ms
Obeda.
