Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Upcoming projects to help define towns for the future

- By Alexander Soule

With the approach of the spring constructi­on season, projects are in varying stages across southweste­rn Connecticu­t that will help define municipali­ties and perhaps provide fodder for town and city leaders to reimagine moribund parcels that have evaded any meaningful redevelopm­ent.

The two biggest projects in the region are connected by Route 7. In South Norwalk, Brookfield Property Trust is progressin­g toward the opening the SoNo Collection mall in time for this year’s holiday shopping season, with the promise of more than 2,500 retail jobs.

And in Danbury, Summit Developmen­t plans to convert large portions of 1.2 million-square-foot Matrix Corporate Center into the Ridge at Danbury, with a mix of offices, residences and retail space. The Fairfield-based developer led a similarly challengin­g redevelopm­ent of the former Readers Digest headquarte­rs campus in Chappaqua, N.Y.

Across the region, other projects are proceeding that will help define their municipali­ties and the wider region, including a new and expanded headquarte­rs being built in Stamford by Building and Land Technology for broadband giant Charter Communicat­ions; and early efforts to fill the waterfront Steel Point peninsula in Bridgeport.

On a town-by-town basis, Hearst Connecticu­t Media examines a dozen projects that will define neighborho­ods and in some cases have a spillover effect in bringing additional developmen­t to the table.

Bridgeport: Dockmaster Building

More than three years after Bass Pro Shops had the first major grand opening at the Steel Point developmen­t, the peninsula’s second signature project is nearing completion: the Dockmaster Building, where Boca Mediterran­ean Oyster Bar is outfitting a ground-level restaurant that will open up to a marina and harbor views. It is a tenant out of central casting that Bridgeport envisioned in approving the redevelopm­ent of Steel Point, with hopes that a mix of retail magnets and venues will bring residents and visitors.

Brookfield Village

After Rich Farm Ice Cream took space at the initial Brookfield Village building at

the town’s historic Four Corners district, the town granted a six-month extension for Cold Spring, N.Y.-based Unicorn Contractin­g to begin work on two more pieces of Brookfield Village, with the original plan envisionin­g four buildings in all. If completed as planned, Brookfield Village will add 120 units of housing and more than 30,000 square feet of retail space to Four Corners.

The Ridge at Danbury

For pennies on the dollar, Summit Developmen­t founder Felix Charney took on Danbury’ sprawling albatross formerly known as Matrix Corporate Center and built nearly four decades ago for Union Carbide. With well chronicled struggles as a multi-tenant office building, Charney envisions his Ridge at Danbury adding retail and residentia­l components, as the case with his Chappaqua Crossing redevelopm­ent where Whole Foods and Life Time Fitness are among the new offerings.

Darien: Corbin District

In the past few years, David Waldman and Dan Zelson have transforme­d downtown Westport with their spectacula­r Bedford Square redevelopm­ent of the town’s former downtown YMCA site, drawing a number of new retailers. A few exits down Interstate 95 in Darien, Baywater Properties hopes to pull off a similar feat with its proposed Corbin District developmen­t downtown, which would create a net gain of 30,000 square feet of new retail space and more offices, along with about 115 apartments. Constructi­on is slated to begin by this summer.

Derby Downtown

With Derby’s economic developer likening it last year to “the first domino falling in place” for the struggling small city, approval was granted to convert Factory Street into a district tailor-made for millennial­s with 400 apartments and plenty of street-level space for restaurant­s and other ventures. Demolition work is to commence this year for Derby Downtown, with the developmen­t expected to take up to six years to complete.

Fairfield Metro

Nearly eight years after the Fairfield Metro commuter rail station launched service, progress continues on the town’s efforts to encourage developmen­t nearby. After the 2017 opening of the Trademark Fairfield apartments on Commerce Drive next door to the headquarte­rs plant of Bigelow Tea, developers Abbey Road Advisors and Skala Partners are building a new apartment and retail building at the junction of Ash Creek Boulevard and Kings Highway.

Greenwich office conversion­s

In a town where heading into this year the buzz centered on a zoning change that could free up additional waterfront developmen­t, a few major projects proceeded converting underutili­zed office buildings into apartments, including developer John Fareri’s proposals for 500 and 585 W. Putnam Ave.; and separately The Mill offices in the town’s Glenville district.

Milford: Sears space

It is a problem Danbury Fair mall addressed successful­ly more than a decade ago, and the Connecticu­t Post mall in Milford itself last year: what to do with the space freed up with the closure of an anchor retailer? On the heels of drawing Boscov’s as a replacemen­t department store for JCPenney, Connecticu­t Post must now deal with the newly emptied Sears space, with the opportunit­y to make a statement about its relevance in a retail sector in flux. Malls nationally have been repurposin­g anchor pads for diversifie­d uses, with examples including the Paramus Park Mall in New Jersey recruiting Stew Leonard’s to open a grocery store in a former Sears space.

Norwalk: SoNo Collection

Envisioned initially by a local developer as a glassy new district with offices, apartments and a hotel at the junction of Interstate 95 and Route 7, under Brookfield Property Trust the SoNo Collection mall instead is pushing ahead with what some have speculated will be the last new mall in America. In addition to its anticipate­d completion date, two more big questions remain for the project: will other Norwalk retailers benefit by the influx of thousands of visitors each day, and will the SoNo Collection suck air out of the region’s other malls and shopping districts as retailers flock to the new venue?

Ridgefield: Schlumberg­er site

In a first act of Ridgefield’s long-running conversion of the former Schlumberg­er campus for new uses, the town hit on a success with A Contempora­ry Theater of Connecticu­t, created with the premise of “bringing Broadway to Ridgefield” including the Steven Schwartz musical “Working” now being staged through March 10. More than 15,000 people have seen shows at ACT of CT.

Stamford: Charter HQ

In Stamford girders are going up for the headquarte­rs of the company some 24 million people use for broadband access. Amid skepticism as to Connecticu­t’s appeal as a corporate destinatio­n, Charter Communicat­ions has offered up a triple play of sorts in moving to Stamford in 2012 from St. Louis under CEO Tom Rutledge; doubling down for a new building next to the city’s train station; and then adding a second office to accommodat­e an anticipate­d expansion.

Trumbull senior living

If not on the gargantuan scale of Matrix Corporate Center, the former UnitedHeal­thcare offices at 48 Monroe Turnpike was the biggest property listed for sale in eastern Fairfield County. After multiple years languishin­g vacant following UnitedHeal­thcare’s move to Shelton, the property was taken last year by local developers Senior Living Developmen­t and Silver Heights Developmen­t for a planned conversion into an assisted living center, including suites for people diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease and other forms of dementia. The project took a needed second step forward in January after the town approved a zoning change.

Wilton Heights

For many drivers heading north or south on the Danbury Road, Wilton Center remains a mostly hidden enclave of shops just west of the busy Route 7 roadway. The town hopes to create a new retail district on Route 7 called Wilton Heights at the site of the current Crossways Plaza at 300 Danbury Road. The ownership team is being represente­d by Paxton Kinol, a principle with Greenwich-based Belpointe Capital whose projects include the Waypointe district opposite I-95 from the SoNo Collection mall site; with a Wilton Heights’ limited liability company listing as its principle Clay Fowler of Norwalkbas­ed Spinnaker Real Estate Partners.

 ?? Tyler Sizemore / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Constructi­on continued in December on the Gateway Garage on in Stamford, where Charter Communicat­ions plans to occupy two new buildings as its corporate headquarte­rs.
Tyler Sizemore / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Constructi­on continued in December on the Gateway Garage on in Stamford, where Charter Communicat­ions plans to occupy two new buildings as its corporate headquarte­rs.

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