Village Center Project presentation, act II


MILLERTON — For the second time this year, county senior planner John Clarke presented a downtown revitilization plan for the village of Millerton. Clarke made a presentation to the public in July, outlining the county’s vision for Millerton’s future as a vibrant, healthy and walkable village. The county worked on the Millerton Village Center Project along with Townscape, a community betterment group. The partnership received the blessing of the Village Board many months ago.

Monday night Clarke repeated the presentation and discussed ways in which the village of Millerton can shape its development to its best advantage.

He spoke about the benefits the village could draw as a member of the Greenway Compact.

"One of the reasons we’re able to do this is because Millerton and North East are both members of the Greenway Compact," Clarke said, adding that Greenways are more than just trails, but rather paths where natural and human landscapes collide. "You have a great Greenway trail going through Millerton. We want to look at the bigger picture."


Revamping Main Street


The planner said Millerton now relies on drive-by traffic to make Main Street work, but he said that should change.

"You need a destination component, be it antique stores, restaurants or even the Rail Trail, which is one of your strongest attractions," Clarke said. "You have to figure out a way to get people out of those cars. That’s where you get your business.

"The whole premise is not to make Millerton look better, it’s to make Millerton work better. Looking better helps, though, in that process," he said.

Clarke said what makes a good Main Street is a narrow roadway that slows traffic to a pedestrian pace. He said on-street parking also helps slow traffic, as well as provide convenience for shoppers. A canopy of street trees helps create rhythm and a good sidewalk system with crosswalks is also key. Outdoor seating also helps, as does continuous store frontage with window displays. Pedestrian-scale signs and color-quality lighting also contribute to the overall effect.

According to Clarke, Millerton is the smallest village in Dutchess County. But that doesn’t mean it can’t have a big impact on those who visit it and reside there. It also has the added benefit that it can tap into its roots.

"The more historic the Main Street the more likely people will get out of their cars," he said. "I think Millerton has the best structural Main Street in Dutchess County, it just needs the component parts to make the whole, whole. Accentuate the best that you have. I’m trying to keep it simple and relatively low cost."


Some solutions


Clarke offered a number of suggestions:

• Place "Welcome to Millerton" signs

• Install continuous sidewalks and regular crosswalks to reinforce pedestrian center

• Highlight a well-defined village square at Railroad Plaza

• Enlarge green/patio area in front of railroad station with parking to the north

• Add curbs, street trees, sidewalks and benches to emphasize the edge of the green

• Make John Street one-way eastbound

• Add a landscaped plaza at John Street as a focal point for the Main Street curve (by the bank)

• Redesign Memorial Park with a summer food building/information kiosk at the eastern end

• Add a covering arbor and movable chairs and tables for flexible seating at Memorial Park

• Plant regularly spaced canopy street trees along the entire length of Main Street

• Create a double row of trees on east Main Street to unify setback and remove front-yard parking

• Narrow pavement on Century Boulevard with sidewalks and street trees, stripe diagonal and parallel parking and build a central landscaped island to visually shorten the block

• Construct a connecting mid-block drive/walkway between Century Boulevard and Main Street


Other village concerns


Clarke also said that in the near future the village will need a sewer system to encourage economic investment and development.

"The village is very small, and there’s almost no place for new businesses to go because of septic issues. As a result, it’s taking away economic growth," he said. "What I’m suggesting is to add both residential and commercial capability to take land in walking distance to build a sewage treatment plant, to allow the residential district and the business district to grow."


Implementing a vision


"I think we need to understand this is a draft, a vision, a dream. It’s a vehicle," Mayor John Scutieri said of the plan. "It’s a big, comprehensive plan and a big package of ideas that we can work with, or not."

"I think it looks like a big project, but if we break it down it’s a path we could follow," Trustee Jack Thomas said. "It’s a plan. I don’t know if the public likes it. I certainly like the idea of doing some revitalization on Century Boulevard and the parking situation. I like the idea of the sewage plant. I think this plan has to be broken up into little chunks to make the big meatball."

Scutieri reminded the board the proposal would have several different phases, each of which would have to be put through site plan review before the Planning Board. He pointed out that the Village Board must first decide if it wants to support the plan.

"We need to focus on whether or not this is an idea we want to adopt," he said. "We’re not making a decision to do anything except to use this as a guideline."

"I have no problem using this as a guideline, but I would not want to see the whole thing come to fruition," Trustee Anne Veteran said.

"I would like to see this moving ahead," Trustee Yosh Schulman said, suggesting that Townscape move onto the next step with the county. "Townscape has a pretty good record of getting things done."

"Townscape can get donations. The village can only get grants," said Townscape member Robert Sadlon. "By working together we’ll get some money to get these projects done, little by little."

Townscape’s Cathy Fenn told the board the group would like to start looking for grants to work on the project.

The board then moved to endorse the Millerton Village Center Project for pursuing the next steps. The motion passed with unanimous support.

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