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Plans presented for medical center

WINSTED — The Planning and Zoning Commission heard informal plans for the construction of a new medical building at their meeting on Monday, Sept. 8.

The proposed medical building, if approved by the commission, would be located at 70 and 84 S. Main St.

The building will be owned by David Sessions, who is the owner of The Casle Corporation of Avon.

Sessions said he has optioned the land on the property in order to construct the building.

He said the building would be two-and-a-half stories high and 20,000 square feet.

While he would own the building, Sessions said he would lease it to an outside medical business.

Sessions would not say at the meeting the business he is planning to lease the building to.

“We optioned the land eight months ago, and we have engaged in a fairly detailed study of the site,” Sessions said. “It has a lot of characteristics that need a lot of study, including environmental and geo-technical and how to fit it for the [plans] that we have. We have reached a point we can develop a building that would be feasible on that site.”

Sessions said the building, once constructed, would house an ambulatory care center.

“That’s a new term for general practice in medicine,” Sessions said. “It is a growing trend in the medical market that hospitals reach out with ambulatory care centers and provide treatment centers for patients.”

A presentation of the draft site plan was made by Phillip Doyle, planner with LADA, P.C. Land Planners of Simsbury and Michael Sherman, Senior Project Engineer with Laurel Engineering of Winsted.

Doyle said the land parcel backs up to Still River and is near the site of a proposed new building planned by Northwest Connecticut Community College at 100 S.Main St.

“We are thinking of putting the new building up towards the street adjacent to Route 44,” Doyle said. “It would take access from the traffic signal and would close all the curb cuts. Right now, the streetscape is entirely open with curb cuts. We will probably have a right turn in and a right turn out driveway at the lower end, close to where the driveway of the Morsel Munk building is now. We will have the main pedestrian entrance to the rear of the parking lot.”

Sherman said the company will have to approach the state to resolve several drainage issues on the land.

Sessions said that, if the plan goes through, the building on 70 S. Main St. where Morsel Munk is located and on 84 S. Main St. where David D’Amore’s real estate agency is located will both be demolished.

Sessions said that if the plans are approved by the commission, construction would start next spring.

As explained by Commission Chairman Peacock at the beginning of the meeting, the plans presented at the Sept. 8 meeting were preliminary and not formal.

Doyle said that the company would be filing formal building plans with the town in October and will be at future Planning and Zoning meetings.

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