Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

‘We want to preserve open space’

Stamford Land Trust pitches land acquisitio­n to Planning Board

- By Veronica Del Valle

STAMFORD — The Stamford Land Conservati­on Trust, a group dedicated to acquiring and preserving open space for public use, is poised to create one of the city’s largest swaths of publicly accessible land if city boards approve a cash transfusio­n to the group.

The end goal is 245 acres of untouched land crowded with lush trees and bucolic streams just a few miles from downtown Stamford.

The Planning Board in mid-August voted unanimousl­y in favor of beginning the purchase of 64 acres of land once part of the sprawl

ing estate of Stamford’s wealthy Altschul family. However, the Stamford Land Conservati­on Trust, now it has convinced the Planning Board, must still win over both the Board of Representa­tives and the Board of Finance before completing the transactio­n in full. If approved, the city would supply $1 million toward the full purchase price.

Though trustees were initially selling the land for about $4 million, according to Land Trust President Harry Day, his organizati­on is under contract to buy the two parcels for $1 million “less than what it would cost to buy ... on the open market.”

Day — who held a seat on the Board of Representa­tives for 19 years and has served on the land trust’s board since 2001 — told The Stamford Advocate that the proprietor­s initially explored developmen­t of the two parcels just north of the Merritt Parkway, linking together two existing SLCT holdings. But the land trust prevailed.

“It’s a once-in-a-lifetime opportunit­y,” Day said to the Planning Board in August. “I had to work real hard with the owners of these properties to give up on selling.”

Martin’s administra­tion will provide $1 million toward the purchase. However, the trust hopes grants from the state Department of Energy and Environmen­tal Protection could subsidize between $300,000 and $500,000 of the sale’s ultimate cost. Day said the trust will know how much money it gets from the state “by October.”

During brief remarks before the Planning Board, Martin lauded the deal as a “terrific thing” for the city.

“We’re trying to take advantage of the developmen­t that we have,” Martin said to the Planning Board. “And in other places, like this one, we want to preserve open space.”

Martin specifical­ly pointed out that he wants the land trust’s property to integrate fully with Stamford’s existing trail system, something that Day said he is amenable to.

But the rest of the final price will have to come from private financiers, some of which have already been secured. Day himself gave $200,000 to the cause, and another private donor contribute­d another $1 million, Day said.

Aside from the land in question, the Altschul name can be spotted all across Stamford.

Under the direction of family patriarch Frank Altschul — New York investment banker-turnedphil­anthropist — the family lavished both Yale University and Williams College in Massachuse­tts with handsome gifts. An annex at the Stamford Museum & Nature Center is named after the family’s famed Overbrook Farms estate. The observator­y at the museum is named, too, after the Altschuls.

The Stamford Conservati­on Land Trust already owns another massive former Altschul property: the 148-acre Helen Altschul Preserve, named after Frank’s late wife. The group said that altogether, nearly one-third of the trust’s properties once belonged to the Altschul family — and that number is only set to grow if the trust obtains final approvals for the 64 acres it has negotiated for.

The Board of Representa­tives is set to decide whether it will green-light the million-dollar appropriat­ion at its next meeting scheduled for 7 p.m. Monday.

 ?? Tyler Sizemore / Hearst Conn. Media ?? Land Conservati­on Trust President Harry Day shows a new parcel of land poised to be acquired by SLCT in Stamford last week.
Tyler Sizemore / Hearst Conn. Media Land Conservati­on Trust President Harry Day shows a new parcel of land poised to be acquired by SLCT in Stamford last week.
 ?? Tyler Sizemore / Hearst Conn. Media ?? Land Conservati­on Trust President Harry Day shows a new parcel of land poised to be acquired by SLCT in Stamford last week.
Tyler Sizemore / Hearst Conn. Media Land Conservati­on Trust President Harry Day shows a new parcel of land poised to be acquired by SLCT in Stamford last week.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States