The Day

EL gives green light to Costco

- By MARY BIEKERT Day Staff Writer

East Lyme — A proposal for a Costco big-box store near Interstate 95’s Exit 74 cleared its final municipal hurdle Tuesday night, allowing developers to potentiall­y break ground in early 2019.

The Water and Sewer Commission voted 8-1 to approve a 7,650-gallon daily sewage capacity for the more than 158,000-square-foot store.

The store would serve as the initial phase of the retail component proposed for the Gateway Commons developmen­t, a 200-acre site between Exits 73 and 74. Gateway developers have built 280 apartments near Exit 73 as part of that developmen­t, and recently proposed an additional 120 rental units to be built over upcoming years.

Before approving the sewage capacity Tuesday, town officials expressed caution about tapping into the town’s finite sewage capacity and questioned how to properly allocate that capacity moving forward — especially with other residentia­l and commercial developmen­ts associated with the Gateway Commons in the pipeline.

Costco’s proposal, however, would use a “modest” percentage of the town’s remaining capacity — approximat­ely 3 percent of an estimated 262,000 gallons still available daily.

As contracted with the city of New London, East Lyme is allowed up to 1.5 million gallons of sewage per day, all of which is sent to New London’s treatment plant.

“Costco’s applicatio­n is a small amount. It’s the future developmen­ts that we are trying anticipate,” said Municipal Utility Engineer Bradford Kargl before Tuesday’s meeting. “There are a lot of other projects coming through, and all of that will have a significan­t impact on the scope of what’s available. We are trying to gauge how to best approach that.”

Tuesday’s final approval comes years after initial negotiatio­ns for the developmen­t began between the town and The Simon Konover Co. of West Hartford, which is developing the Gateway site with KGI Properties of Providence. The zoning commission first approved their master developmen­t plan in 2008.

Last month, the Costco proposal still needed town approval for a building permit, as well as other permits from the state Department of Transporta­tion and Office of the State Traffic Administra­tion.

Building Official Steve Way said Tuesday he reviewed the developer’s applicatio­n and expects to sign off on it in coming weeks, saying that Tuesday’s sewage capacity approval was the last major hurdle the developmen­t needed on the municipal level. The approval was needed for Way to approve the applicatio­n.

Developers still need a final go-ahead from the town’s fire marshal on their building permit applicatio­n. That approval is also expected to happen in coming weeks, Way said.

“Once that happens, they will have the building permit,” Way said.

“We want to get them digging, clearing and doing what they need to do on the site before it gets much colder,” Way said, adding that building constructi­on will likely begin in spring. “They’ve done enough of these, it’s cookie cutter for them once they get going. But if they can get in the ground before the frost, they’ll be able to move forward on schedule.”

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