Planning Collaborative makes recommendations Village

FALLS VILLAGE — The following are recommendations from the Northwest Connecticut Planning Collaborative’s Revitalization Strategies for Falls Village. These are from a draft of the document discussed at a September meeting with the first selectmen of the eight towns in the collaborative (all six Region One towns, plus Norfolk and Goshen).

The recommendations are a follow-up to a study done by planning and environmental consulting firm AKRF over the summer. The study identified strengths and weaknesses in Falls Village’s small downtown area.

Nine stores were surveyed.

Under “strengths,� the report cited the attractive historic district and a village center that is easy to walk to, and the proximity to natural attractions — the Housatonic River, the Great Falls and hiking trails. The renovated railroad depot and museum draws visitors, and the two new openings — P.D. Walsh’s Country Store, which opened last month, and the Falls Village Inn, which is undergoing renovation — should help make the downtown area a destination.

One identified weakness — the lack of a central gathering place — could be turned into an asset with the help of the Toymaker’s Cafe.

Other weaknesses identified were a “lack of critical mass of stores,� and the fact that the village center requires visitors get off Route 7 to find out what opportunities are available in town.

The  report suggests, in the short term, that Falls Village promote the village center as a gathering place for recreational visitors — cyclists, hikers, boaters and anglers — and co-market the Falls Village Inn, P.D. Walsh’s Country Store and Toymaker’s. It also advises improving the signs directing visitors from the village center to the river, the falls and hiking trails, and focusing on convenience goods.

In the long term, the suggestions are to use the depot for passenger and/or tourist trains (there has been some talk of reestablishing passenger service from Grand Central Station in New York City to Pittsfield, Mass.) and to establish a specialty or historic car museum, to take advantage of the nearby Lime Rock Park race track and Jacobs Garage, which sponsored a successful and well-attended vintage car show over the summer.

 

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