New Restaurant Proposed for Forest Street; Property Owner Seeks P&Z Approval To Pay Fee To Meet Parking Requirement

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An experienced restaurateur wants to open a new eatery on Forest Street that would include a sushi bar, but before pursuing that plan, the building’s owner is seeking the town’s permission to help meet a difficult parking requirement, records show.

The commercial space at 11 Forest St. in New Canaan has been vacant since Peachwave froyo moved out one year ago. The property's owner said a new restaurant is interested in the space, but P&Z permission first is needed to meet a parking requirement by paying a fee instead of providing the physical spaces. Credit: Michael Dinan

The commercial space at 11 Forest St. in New Canaan has been vacant since Peachwave froyo moved out one year ago. The property’s owner said a new restaurant is interested in the space, but P&Z permission first is needed to meet a parking requirement by paying a fee instead of providing the physical spaces. Credit: Michael Dinan

That vision for the space at 11 Forest St.—vacant since Peachwave frozen yogurt closed one year ago—represents a proposal only at this stage, the property’s owner told NewCanaanite.com.

What’s needed in order to kickstart the project is approval from the Planning & Zoning Commission for Frank Elmasry of 3-11 Forest Street KKE LLC to pay a fee instead of figuring out some way to provide the estimated eight physical parking spaces that would be needed if the commercial space is re-classified from “retail” (as it is currently) to “restaurant.”

In an Aug. 2 application to P&Z, Elmasry said: “The potential restaurant owner plans to make significant investments in the fit-out in order to provide a venue that is aesthetically pleasing and in harmony with the existing establishments on Forest Street, adding to the attractive character of the town. The owner has a track record of success in New Jersey and New York and this would be his first location in Connecticut. His unique cuisine would make it complementary to the other restaurants in New Canaan.”

It isn’t clear just what the restaurant would offer, though a floor plan obtained by NewCanaanite.com details a 4-stool bar as well as a 6-stool sushi bar on entering from Forest Street, as well as four tables and five booths in a dining area.

Under the New Canaan Zoning Regulations, businesses in the “magic circle” of the Retail A zone along Main and Elm Streets do not need to provide parking.

For the Retail B zone, which includes Forest Street businesses that do not have Main Street addresses, a retailer must have one parking space per 200 square feet of gross floor area (see page 111 here), but a restaurant must have one space per 100 square feet.

The regulations allow that by a special permit and with two-thirds vote of the Planning & Zoning Commission, a property owner may pay a per-space “fee-in-lieu” of the parking requirement, so long as certain conditions are met.

They include that the additional parking spaces could not be located on the site, that the proposal will not detract from the village feel and quality of life downtown and that the change in use will be beneficial to the community and consistent with the Plan of Conservation & Development. (The rules currently call for a fee of $7,500 per space, officials say, and the zoning regs require that “fees collected from such payments shall be placed into a fund to be used solely for the acquisition, development, expansion or capital repair of public parking facilities.”)

P&Z is scheduled to hear the matter during a special meeting at 6 p.m. Tuesday at Town Hall.

According to Elmasry, the building’s private parking lot (out back) “is currently insufficient in size to accommodate the parking requirement of a restaurant.”

That lot has 36 spaces, half of which “are designated and reserved by name for the office tenants occupying the upper floors.”

“The remaining half of the parking spaces are undesignated and are available for the retail business that is located on this property. In addition, we have a part-time security guard/parking attendant who helps implement the in-house rules. However, our parking lot has always been used by unauthorized individuals who park their cars while visiting other establishments in town.”

The property’s owners are facing a hardship in filling the vacancy at 11 Forest St., Elmasry told P&Z in his application.

“On two separate occasions, restaurants that wanted to rent our vacant space terminated their negotiations when they learnt about the additional costly parking that is required under the current regulations because our property is a few feet outside the magic circle,” he said.

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3 thoughts on “New Restaurant Proposed for Forest Street; Property Owner Seeks P&Z Approval To Pay Fee To Meet Parking Requirement

  1. A lot of special circumstances going through PZ, someone is going to be badly hurt or killed by the congestion being created on Forest/ locust.
    Fire trucks , parking garage, oversized
    Post office, trump like condos ,
    Restaurants galore.
    People better pay attention to those late evening P and Z hearings before the whole village is three story apartment building.
    Exceptions are becoming the rule
    Dangerous

  2. Ditto Mary Allen. It seems, if you follow the various P+Z applications, that in seeking huge variances, a lot of airtime is being taken up by extolling the virtues of the developer/owner. Why not focus on enforcing the current regs, otherwise change them if they don’t work. Merritt Apartments is a perfect example.

  3. Forest Street would be perfect to convert to a cobble-stoned pedestrian/cycle-only-zone with NO parking, only access for emergency vehicles, deliveries, and Forest St. residents. I’d happily walk 100+ yards from a designated parking lot, to hang about a calm and traffic-free down-town area! I’d likely spend more time and money at the local diner, spa, sports store, restaurant and get coffee with a street that had such flair. Think there are many Canaanites that also would value that.
    Aside, it seems rather odd to require an establishment to ‘must have’ parking or face a fee/P&Z denial, especially when Elm Street does not have that. It’d be great to allow establishments to try to entice clients to their store, DEPSITE not having a primo parking space right in front of their shop door. Think a lot of current NC citizens can and would appreciate a good sushi bar in town, that they might have to walk to.

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