Former firehouse ready for new life

SALISBURY — After a public hearing Tuesday, June 17, the Planning and Zoning Commission (P&Z) voted unanimously to approve the special permit for the site plan for the development of the former firehouse and adjacent building at 9 and 9A Sharon Road (Route 41).The new owners, Jennifer and Owen Thomas, and advisor Chris Brennan, requested a special permit on the parking requirements. There will be 26 parking spaces on the site; the request was for a waiver of 18 additional spaces. The Thomases noted the existence of other public parking in the immediate area.The two lots will be combined into one.Brennan said in a phone interview Friday, June 27, that the plans, which up until now have been preliminary, will be finalized shortly and the project put out to bid.She said the basic idea is to have a restaurant and two retail spaces on the ground floor and office space upstairs.Brennan herself will open an antiques and interior design store in the white building next door at 9A Sharon Road.She said the major visible change will be windows instead of the garage doors that are there now. “It will still look like a firehouse.”Brennan said the entire process has taken longer than she anticipated. It took three months to get the state Department of Transportation to sign off on the parking and traffic aspects.The sale of the property from the town to the Thomases, for $200,000, was approved at town meeting Oct. 29, 2013. There had been two offers: the Thomas’s and one from Seth Churchill for $300,000, but the latter was withdrawn before the town meeting.The Thomas’s initial offer was $75,000, a sum some people in town considered too low, but they increased their offer before the town meeting. At an information meeting Oct. 21, when the Thomas and Churchill offers were presented, First Selectman Curtis Rand noted that the plan had always been to use $125,000 of the proceeds from the sale of the former firehouse to reimburse the Lakeville Hose Company. So if the town voted for the initial Thomas offer, another $50,000 would have to be found to make that happen. If the town voted for Churchill’s plan, $125,000 of the $300,000 would have gone to the Hose Company.The final offer of $200,000 from the Thomases reflected that concern.It had been a long haul for the town, trying to find a buyer for the property and a use that would make residents happy. In 2011, Frank Gallogly offered $475,000 for the property, which he wanted to use to store a collection of classic automobiles.The P & Z declined to support that offer on Oct. 4, 2011.Kennedy Foods LLC, which operates Jam in Sharon, made an offer last year but backed out. Other proposed uses for the property included affordable housing and a fitness center.

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Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.