Inn to reopen with new management

FALLS VILLAGE — In a welcome sign of renewed economic life, the Falls Village Inn has been purchased by Greenwich advertising executive Colin Chambers, who plans to reopen the restaurant and bar, and offer six bedrooms with baths on the second floor.

Sue Sweetapple of Pine Bush, N.Y., who has 20-plus years experience in hotel management, will be the manager and the public face of the inn.

Chambers handles advertising for Lime Rock Park. He said when he saw the inn listed for sale, “I just happened to be in the market for something.�

He turned to Sweetapple, who runs fan hospitality events at the racetrack, for her expertise.

After a week into the project, Chambers said there are “a lot of unanswered questions.

“But I’m an entrepreneur,� he said cheerfully. “That’s what we do.�

Although the bar and kitchen look as if they could be ready to go after a good dusting, the duo are taking their time.

And in a thoroughly modern twist, they established a Facebook page, using the social media Web site to ask the community what they want in the new Falls Village Inn.

Sweetapple said when the Facebook page was set up last week, “I went to bed with two friends, and woke up with 170.�

“We couldn’t have gotten that kind of response that quickly� with traditional marketing surveys, Chambers added.

The reopening of the inn comes at a time when Falls Village and the other seven Northwest Corner towns participating in the Northwestern Connecticut Planning Collaborative’s Village Center Vitality Initiative are looking for ways to breathe economic life into the town centers (see story, page A18).

And the interest in the new inn is intense. “Every time we visit,� said Sweetapple, “someone walks in asking if we’re open.�

Chambers said this “ear to the ground� approach is perfect for his goal: “It’s all about making this a neighborhood place.�

Suggestions include: local ingredients, affordability, classic American food — and open year-round.

Chambers said, “When I first saw the building I thought of it as an inn. I’ve learned that it should be more of a gathering place.�

There is plenty of work to do.

The second floor bedrooms, while certainly habitable, suffer from an erratic style of interior decoration that needs to be addressed.

The top floor is neglected and full of assorted junk.

The porch is glassed in, a situation the new innkeepers plan to rectify, and the bar is dark.

“We need light in here,� said Chambers.

They plan to hire local contractors, and are “doing everything in town.�

Or in the area, anyway.

Sweetapple said she was talking to a longtime resident who said in his youth the inn was busy all the time.

“He said the men got off work, came here for a couple, then went home, washed up, and brought their families back for dinner.�

And that’s what Chambers and Sweetapple hope will happen again.

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