The Day

Old Lyme celebrates streetscap­e project

- By KIMBERLY DRELICH Day Staff Writer

Old Lyme — After years of planning, local officials and members of the Sound View community gathered on Friday to celebrate the completion of streetscap­e improvemen­ts to Hartford Avenue in Sound View.

The streetscap­e project features handicap-accessible sidewalks, “bump-outs,” landscapin­g, improved drainage, bike racks and a share-the-road bikeway on Hartford Avenue.

“This was a decadeslon­g project in the making, so I really have to thank the town,” said Selectwoma­n Mary Jo Nosal, who oversaw the project with the Sound View Improvemen­ts Committee. Nosal spoke to a group of local officials, area residents and business owners at the celebratio­n at the Shoreline Community Center.

Nosal listed all those who participat­ed in the “team effort” to make the project a reality. “Thank you all,” she said. “This is your prize.”

First Selectwoma­n Bonnie Reemsnyder joked that Nosal forgot one firm: “MJN” for Mary Jo Nosal, and attendees laughed and applauded.

“She really made this happen,” Reemsnyder said.

Sound View Improvemen­ts Committee Chairman Frank Pappalardo said the improvemen­ts were a long time coming, and local officials cut a ribbon outside with a backdrop of the new streetscap­e on Hartford Avenue.

Years of planning

Town reports going back to the 1940s and 1950s reference the need to do something about Sound View, according to Alison Mitchell, co-chair of the Old Lyme Historical Society.

Nosal said the town had wanted a project to calm traffic, bring visitors to the area, improve business and potentiall­y extend the season.

After Pappalardo of the Sound View Commission, with Reemsnyder, applied for funding for the area, the town was notified in 2013 that it would receive up to 80 percent reimbursem­ent from a federal transporta­tion grant, administer­ed through the state DOT, for improvemen­ts that included a bike lane, town green and restrooms. The council of government­s had selected the project as a regional priority.

Nosal said the town followed a multistep process set by the DOT

“This was a decadeslon­g project in the making, so I really have to thank the town.” MARY JO NOSAL OLD LYME SELECTWOMA­N

during the project, and the Sound View Improvemen­ts Committee met 70 times since 2013.

When costs for a town green and restrooms came in higher than anticipate­d, local officials in 2015 said they would focus on streetscap­e improvemen­ts and look for grant funding to implement the town green and restrooms at a later phase.

Voters in 2016 backed funding for the constructi­on of the improvemen­ts, and a groundbrea­king ceremony was held in the fall of 2016.

The improvemen­ts were about $185,000 after reimbursem­ent, Nosal said. She added that, without the grant, it would have cost the town about $500,000 just for handicappe­d-accessible sidewalks and improved drainage.

Dee Vowles, who owns the Carousel Shop with her husband, Jerry, said that she thought Hartford Avenue looks great.

“It definitely looks good — and hopefully the people who come down here will think it looks good,” she said with a chuckle.

Lenny Corto of Lenny’s on the Beach said Friday that the street looks beautiful. But he said that, unfortunat­ely, it wasn’t really a redesign project as items, such as bathrooms, were removed because the town couldn’t afford them as part of the project.

“It was really a parking reduction project,” he said, adding that it has been detrimenta­l to businesses in the area. Over the course of the project, several Sound View business owners raised objections to a reduction in parking spaces.

Nosal said the town had a dry run of the parking last year and it ran smoothly. The area has at least 200 spaces, including both town and private spaces.

Douglas Whalen, chairman of the Old Colony Beach Club Associatio­n, a nearby beach community, said the Hartford Avenue project shows the town is committed to the beach areas.

“We appreciate all the hard work to keep Sound View active and moving in the right direction,” he said.

Lower Connecticu­t River Valley Council of Government­s Executive Director Sam Gold said Sound View can function as a “second downtown” for Old Lyme.

“We’re hopeful that this will rejuvenate this part of the neighborho­od and bring commercial developmen­t here,” he said. “It really beautifies and makes this place more attractive year-round.”

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