Depot work could begin in January

NORTH CANAAN — The paperwork has finally been approved by the state, putting plans for the last phase of the renovation of Canaan Union Station in the hands of the Board of Selectmen.

At their Nov. 3 meeting, board members approved authorizing Selectman Charlie Perotti to sign all documents related to the project and move forward with putting it out to bid. 

Perotti has served as the liaison between the Connecticut Railroad Historic Association (which owns the historic landmark) and the state Department of Transportation (which will administer $1.3 million in federal appropriations toward interior and exterior finishing work and landscaping). 

The depot will be reopened and expected to function much as it did before an October 2001 fire destroyed nearly half of it. Retail and office space and a restaurant will be created. One addition is a railroad museum in the three-story signal tower.

The town has a $600,000 grant toward its 20 percent share of costs.

It has been a long haul, with years spent getting approvals for plans and establishing agreements between the DOT and Housatonic Railroad Company for various work associated with the renovation. Among the latest modifications is a plan to remove the cement passenger platform that extends along the west side of the station. Perotti said the railroad company was unable to get to the project as planned. It will be included in the final phase.

Within a few weeks, the project is expected to be advertised for contractors to submit bids. Those will be due within a month. That puts the project on track to begin as early as January. Work is estimated to take a year.

Perotti dared to predict the long-awaited reopening will happen in spring 2016.

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