
Burying Hill Beach (Photo/William Weiss)
The Hamlet at Saugatuck is dead.
But when Spinnaker Real Estate bought 2 of the properties that had been slated for development — the rectangle anchored by Minute Man Cleaners, and the private parking lot now filled with boats above Luciano Park — Westporters knew that new ideas would be proposed.
Today, we have our first look at Spinnaker’s plans.
The Norwalk-based firm has filed a pre-application with the Planning & Zoning Commission. It includes 157 units of rental apartments, with a mixed-use component, on the 1.5-acre parcel at the corner of Riverside Avenue and Charles Street (the current dry cleaners, locksmith and parking lot). Eighteen — a bit over 10% — of the units would be affordable, based on state definitions.

The view from Riverside Avenue. Charles Street is on the right.
Working with Beinfield Architecture — a firm that has designed many multi-family buildings (including The Mill on Richmondville Avenue), residential homes, restaurants and offices in the area — Spinnaker envisions buildings of varying heights.
Those facing Riverside Avenue would be 3 1/2 stories. Buildings behind it would be taller.
Two levels of screened parking would accommodate 283 vehicles.

The view looking at Railroad Place. The train station is at far left.
Spinnaker’ traffic engineers, AKRF, say that an initial review suggests the plan would generate “substantially fewer vehicle trips than earlier submittals.” A full analysis is underway now.
Construction staging would be done at Spinnaker’s other property, the lot on Franklin Street currently used for boat storage.
The plan also includes environmental remediation of the site (before its current use as a dry cleaners, it was a car dealership), along with right-of-way and pedestrian improvements.
Along with the P&Z pre-app, a preliminary presentation to the Architectural Review Board is planned for later this month.
Click here for a link to a complete summary of the pre-application. Spinnaker has set up a website – 606riverside.com — for the project, though it has no content yet.
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Posted in Local politics, Real estate, Saugatuck
Tagged Beinfield Architecture, Spinnaker, The Hamlet at Saugatuck
As we prepare for another beach season — and Old Mill Grocery & Deli gets ready for its busiest time of year — we’re reminded of the history of the 107-year-old market/community center.
We’ve posted many photos of past iterations — particularly when Ken Montgomery owned it. Here’s a rare photo of the man himself:

Here’s one of our favorites, from the very early days:

(Photos courtesy of Christopher Maroc)
It shows how much has changed on Compo Hill.
And how little has really changed, at one of Westport’s favorite institutions.
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Posted in Beach, Friday Flashback, Local business
All across Westport, new construction is replacing old.
Almost everywhere, that is.
Last night at Town Hall — a repurposed building itself — the Historic District Commission’s Preservation Awards reminded residents that buyers of older properties have options other than demolition.
The ceremony celebrated “homeowners, builders and businesses (who) are dedicated to preserving our shared history for the future.”
2026 Preservation Award winners include:
4 Old Hill Road
Owner: Ann Sisto
Excellence in Ongoing Care and Maintenance

Purchased in 2021 by Ann Sisto, this is a refined Colonial Revival home, built circa 1932 and sensitively renovated in 2022.
Early owner Emil Dennert — a painter involved in the building trades — adds an element of artistic heritage to the property.
The house sits on a level lot on the north side of Old Hill Road, opposite the King’s Highway North Drill Ground. Its main block features a roof ridge parallel to the street, wood shingles, and a tall central brick chimney. A prominent, asymmetrically placed gabled bay defines the south façade, while a 2-story addition extends from the north elevation.
The entrance is sheltered by an integral shed-roof portico incorporating a projecting bay window. The paneled door, framed by sidelights and topped with a pronounced cornice, reflects the elegant characteristic of Colonial Revival architecture.
For her commitment to the preservation and careful stewardship of this historic home, Ann Sisto and her team — Bill Achilles of Achilles Architects; Jill O’Shea of Jill O’Shea Home Design, and Keith Manca of Keith J. Manca Building Company — earned a 2026 Preservation Award for Excellence in Ongoing Care and Maintenance.
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6 Oak Street
Owner: Eva Kornreich
Excellence in Ongoing Care and Maintenance
(Home not pictured)
This is a 1-½ story Colonial Revival Cape. It features a gabled roof set parallel to the street, an exterior end chimney, and a narrow eave overhang. The 5-bay façade includes a central entrance with a modern paneled door and full-height storm door, sheltered by a gabled portico supported by square posts. A small 2-step stoop provides access. Windows are paired with 6-over-1 double-hung sash with molded trim.
Owner Eva Kornreich worked with architect Kevin Huelster on this project.
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14 Treadwell Avenue
Owners: Nate Collins and Lili Bordan
Restoration Preservation Award

Built in 1890, this is a well-preserved example of a popular type of vernacular Victorian dwelling, typically erected from stock builders’ plans and sold through mail order plan books in the late 19th century.
The house is a simply massed rectangular building, oriented with its gables to the north and south and crowned with a pitched roof with deep overhanging eaves. The south gable serves as the façade, where the front entry is offset to the west of 2 parlor windows.
Its dominant architectural feature is a 1-story hip-roofed wraparound porch, mounted on seven turned posts fitted with jig-sawn brackets designed to support the porch cornice. Also notable is the double-arched window lighting the attic gable.
Owners Nate Collins and Lili Bordan have preserved its architectural integrity and Victorian charm.
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24 Morningside Drive South
Owners: George Tsahirides and Lillian Fortino
Restoration Preservation Award

The c.1852 Charles B. Sherwood House is a well-preserved example of the Italianate villa, a hallmark of the Victorian-era picturesque movement.
This residential style was valued for offering practical, comfortable, and visually appealing homes that could be built economically. Designs for small villas like this one were widely circulated in the period’s architectural pattern books.
Notable Italianate features of the house include its machine-cut roof brackets, tulip-capped colonnettes supporting the porch roof, and tall 6-pane ground-floor casement windows — elements that retain the character of the home’s original design.
George Tsahirdes and Lillian Fortino meticulously restored and stewarded this historic property.
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26 Treadwell Avenue
Owners:26 Treadwell LLC
Rehabilitation Preservation Award

The Henry Patchen House stands on a lot he acquired in 1912. Despite later porch alterations, the property remains a strong example of a Queen Anne–period residence, a style commonly built from builders’ plans sold through mail-order catalogues.
Notable features include its cross-gabled form, designed to maximize natural light; incised brackets made possible by advances in assembly-line production during the Industrial Revolution, and characteristic mix of siding materials that provide visual texture.
The Victorian-era cross-gable house is fronted by a 1-story, 3-sided wraparound porch supported by simple rectangular posts, with the east side now screened. Deep overhanging eaves define the roofline. The intersecting east and west wings feature 3-sided angled window bays with distinctive corner overhangs trimmed with incised console brackets. The main structure is clad in clapboard, while the gables are finished with novelty-pattern shingles.
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35 Wright Street
Owners: Carl and Cynthia Muller
Helen Muller Preservation Award

The Zalman Sanford House was built in 1845. By 1955 the property was occupied by Theodore Muller, and it has remained in the Muller family ever since.
The 2-story, 3-by-2-bay structure was built in the Greek Revival style. A 2-story ell and 1-story attached garage were added in the 1960s. The most recent renovations were completed in 2025.
Owners Carl and Cynthia Muller worked with Jack Franzen and David Woitowitz of J.P. Franzen Associates; Mike Kaesmann of Kaesmann Builders LLC; Gloria Gouveia of Land Use Consultants; Diane Devore of Devore Associates; and Mike Ceci of Ceci Bros, Inc. The Helen Muller Preservation Award honors a property within a local historic district that exemplifies excellence in restoration or preservation.
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44 Compo Mill Cove
Owners: Lance and Anne Lonergan
Rehabilitation Preservation Award

The much-photographed Gallagher Cottage is one of the oldest remaining homes in the Mill Cove Historic District. The district is composed of cottages and bungalows designed in Colonial Revival and Bungalow-style architecture, all built between 1908 and 1940.
The Gallagher Cottage was constructed circa 1917 as a bungalow, and is noted as one of the best preserved structures in the district. The modest home also had a smaller cottage built circa 1905.
The home exhibits typical Bungalow-style architectural characters, with some details commonly seen in Craftsman architecture dating from 1905 to 1930. It is a 1-1/2 story simple floor plan featuring a large central fireplace with a stone exterior, a deep covered porch tucked beneath the main side-gabled roof, and a large, shed dormer looking out to Long Island Sound. Distinctive roof details typical of the style include exposed rafter ends at the exterior walls, and a subtle break in the roof slope.
The home has changed hands less frequently than usual. Anne and Lance Lonergan purchased the home in 2022. They undertook a significant restoration project to raise the home to meet modern standards for coastal resilience, while preserving its historic character.
Preserved details include the deep porch, shed dormer and described roof, which was further enhanced with the installation of the more historically appropriate cedar roof in place of the asphalt shingles.
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64 Wright Street
Owners: Kathy Bergsteinsson & David Grimes
Restoration Preservation Award

This historic home is named after its original owner, Frederick Morehouse, who earned his living as a shoemaker. Constructed circa 1840, the residence has undergone several additions over time. It was most recently restored in 2024.
This well-preserved vernacular Greek Revival-style home, accented with Colonial Revival details, is distinguished by its gable end facing the street, wide roof overhangs at the eaves and rake, and returns at the gable ends.
The façade is arranged in a 3/3 bay configuration with an offset entrance sheltered by a gabled portico supported by slender columns. The entrance features an arched transom and 3/4 sidelights, with the arch echoed in the portico’s gabled roof.
The house occupies a level lot on the north side of Wright Street, within the King’s Highway North Local and National Historic Districts.
The owners are new to Westport, but have chosen an iconic building as their home. In recognition of their commitment to preservation, they are honored along with Alfred Demarco, owner; Steven Folb, developer and owner’s agent; Deirdre O’Farrelly, architect; Peter Stofa & Company and team, builder; Cuoco Structural Engineers, engineer; Andy Ramage, ARD Builders, restoration contractor, and Maggi Baumbusch & Family, inspiration.
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70 Turkey Hill Road South
Owners: Rahul Ghai and Priyanka Singh
Restoration Preservation Award

The John F. Dingee House stands on a lot purchased in 1892. The owner later assisted in constructing the nearby trotting track (c. 1915) used by E.T. Bedford at his horse and breeding farm on West Parish Road. The two men shared use of the track for many years.
This late-19th-century Queen Anne residence has been extensively restored by current owners Rahul Ghai and Priyanka Singh. Although a previously issued demolition permit would have allowed them to raze the structure, they elected to preserve it, utilizing zoning regulation 32-18, which also permitted construction of an additional building. Their project included rebuilding the front and rear porches, replacing vinyl siding with wood, and installing a new wood roof in place of asphalt shingles.
The house is a distinguished wood-framed structure characterized by its asymmetrical massing and distinctive roofline of hipped and peaked forms. The primary gable-front block faces east toward Turkey Hill Road, while a secondary hip-roofed wing containing the main entrance extends north. A 1-story shed roof porch supported by 3 posts unites the 2 volumes, and frames the northern entry bay. All 2-over-2 window sash are reproductions.
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107 Wilton Road
Owner: Janet Liston-Reynolds
Rehabilitation Preservation Award

The Hurlbutt-Haslam House, constructed circa 1740, is an early Federal-style residence that has undergone substantial alteration through multiple additions over the past two centuries.
The main block is oriented with its gable end facing the street. A 1-1/2 story ell extends from the north elevation, followed by a set-back single-story garage. The ell aligns flush with the main block.
The house features wide eave and rake overhangs, and a modern brick chimney is centrally located along the main-block ridge near its junction with the ell.
The property, referred to as the “Old Mansion House” at Old Hill in an April 5, 1790, deed, was likely built by Captain Phineas Hanford sometime after 1737.
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Posted in History, Real estate
Tagged Historic District Commission, Treadwell Avenue, Wright Street
What is the concession contract at Compo Beach, the Longshore pavilion and Longshore halfway house worth?
$8,333 a month in year one of a 3-year contract; $9,166 per month the second year, and $10,000 the third. That works out to about $100,000, $110,000 and $120,000 a year.
The terms were worked out between the Parks & Recreation Department and NG Entertainment, a Westport-based company owned by Nikki Glekas.
On Wednesday (6 p.m., livestream), the Planning & Zoning Commission discusses the lease. They’re involved because Compo and Longshore are public property.
Glekas’ business could sell alcohol at the halfway house, and from a roaming golf cart.
The contract would begin May 15, and end November 15, 2029 (the last day of that golf season.
Two 2-year extension options could be exercised, at the town’s discretion.
After the P&Z, the contract goes to the Boards of Finance and Selectpersons for final approval.
Click here for a full copy of the lease.

A mural may not be all that’s new at the beach this year. A local concessionaire may replace Hook’d. The town bought out that company’s lease earlier this year. (Photo/Carm Roda)
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Speaking of which: Compo Beach is for everyone.
Including nesting birds.
In fact, they were here long before we were.
New signs — colorful, informative, and quite clear — warn humans (and their dogs) to give them plenty of space.
We don’t need that little section of the beach. They do.
Stay away, until the signs are gone.
And the birds are ready to fend for themselves.

(Photo/Matt Murray)
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The weather cleared beautifully yesterday — just in time for the opening of the outdoor Westport Farmers’ Market.
The 20th opening, in fact. That’s quite a milestone.

The Imperial Avenue parking lot was packed. And it will be, every Thursday between now and November, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

If you’ve never been: Go! From fresh produce, breads, baked goods, meats and seafood to flowers, dog treats and food trucks for lunch — plus live music, knife sharpening and much more — the Farmers’ Market has something for everyone.
And if you’re a regular — see you there!

(Photos/Susan Garment)
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Also yesterday: the always-inspiring A Better Chance of Westport “Dream Event.”
For a quarter century, the local chapter of the national non-profit has brought academically gifted and highly motivated teenagers of color to town. They live together, attend Staples, are supported by Westport volunteers — and give back at least as much as they get, to the community.
Last night, at the spectacular House Up on the Hill in Norwalk, ABC celebrated 2 graduating seniors, and 1 longtime volunteer.
Souleye Kebe and Vincent Vega are graduating, after 4 years in the program. After loving introductions by their host families, both spoke eloquently and movingly about their time at ABC’s Glendarcy House, at Staples and in Westport.
Souleye — who is a student representative on the Board of Education, president of Student Council, a member of the high school’s award-winning We the People team, and was the “Wrecker Bob” mascot at football games — talked about the impact his July 4th birthday had on his passion for democracy. He will attend Northwestern University.
Vincent — a talented baseball player — described the 4 families that have been central to his life: the one he was born into; his ABC “brothers”; his baseball team, and his 2 host families.
Both scholars received standing ovations for their words, and their contributions to their school and adopted town.

Souleye Kebe and Vincent Vega.
Maggie Gomez — a math teacher, who serves as both the liaison between Staples and A Better Chance, and with her husband Felix is a host parent — received ABC’s Community Award. She too spoke about the importance of the program, to all who are involved.
For more information on ABC — including how to volunteer and donate — click here.
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The need for blood is never-ending.
Your next chance to give is Monday (May 11, 8 a.m. to 1 p.m., Westport Woman’s Club, 44 Imperial Avenue). The drive is sponsored by the WWC and American Red Cross.
To make an appointment, click here; enter Westport in the “Zip/Sponsor Code” box. Or call 800-REDCROSS.

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Anyone for tennis?
Westport’s Parks & Recreation Department hosts a free Tennis Festival this Saturday (May 9, 12 to 4 p.m., Longshore).
The afternoon includes free adult and junior lessons (12-2 p.m.), a fast serve contest, hitting for prizes, adult and junior point play (2-4 p.m.), food trucks and a raffle.
Questions? Call Dave Kardas: 203-520-9815.

Longshore tennis courts (Photo/Cliona Becker)
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Hacky sack is back!
The 1970s game is being played all over Staples High School’s main courtyard — and outside the cafeteria too.
Not only that: The Wreckers are the game’s FCIAC (league) champs.
At least, this banner says they are:

(Photo/Dee Hychko)
We’re not sure if it’s tongue in cheek, so we may be putting our foot in our mouth.
No matter. Game on!
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Speaking of Staples : The Class of 1966 celebrates their 60th reunion this year. A full weekend of activities is planned, from September 18-20.
I’ve been a guest at their previous bashes. They do reunions as energetically and creatively as they did high school.
If you are in that class, or know someone who was, email Ed Garlick for details: e.garlickiii@att.net.

Staples High School, as the Class of 1966 remembers it.
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Nesting birds aren’t the only creatures who need a wide berth at Compo (story above).
It’s gosling season at the shore.
They take their time waddling across the road, as today’s “Westport … Naturally” photo shows.
But — as with birds — this is their beach too.

(Photo/Matt Murray)
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And finally …Happy V-E Day!
On this date in 1945, Nazi Germany surrendered unconditionally to the Allies, effectively ending World War II in Europe.
Released right around that time, this is widely considered the ultimate homecoming anthem.
(Every day, “06880” takes you on a journey — with many emotions — through Westport’s past and present. If you appreciate this hyper-local blog, please click here to support our work. Thank you!)
Charlie Hall says, “We’re all drummers. It’s a way we organize time and sound, to signify an event or convey an emotion.”
That may be true.
But very few of us can drum as well as Hall.
The 1992 Greens Farms Academy graduate and Wilton native has spent his professional life as a drummer. (Plus, he’s a songwriter, producer and multi-instrument performer.)
Hall is a longtime percussionist with the Grammy Award-winning band The War on Drugs. He releases his own music too.
He’s produced 3 Christmas LPs with Patti LaBelle, Stevie Nicks (and the Philadelphia Eagles).

Charlie Hall
Hall is also a founder of Get Up With It. Since the late 1990s, the project has explored and performed the groundbreaking 1969-1975 era of Miles Davis’ electric music.
On May 24 (7 p.m.), Hall and Get Up With It kick off the Levitt Pavilion’s 53rd season — and celebrate the centennial of Davis’ birth — with a special concert.
The ensemble will focus on 3 of the trumpeter’s most influential albums: 1969’s visionary and transcendental “In a Silent Way” the 1970 magnum opus “Bitches Brew,” and 1971’s “Jack Johnson.”
Hall began drumming at age 3, when his grandmother bought him a tin Muppets set.
By 6, he had a set of Ludwigs.
His brother — older by 9 years — introduced Hall to ’70s rock legends like the Rolling Stones, the Who and Led Zeppelin. In high school he listened to WLIR, and was introduced to the Pretenders, Talking Heads and U2.
“Drums were the way I met people and built relationships,” Hall recalls.
A special relationship was with Jean Rabin, owner of Record & Tape of Westport. He was there at least weekly. She encouraged his love of music. His room was plastered with posters she saved for him. “I wish I could thank her for all she did,” he says.

(Courtesy of Christopher Maroc)
GFA dean of students/registrar/math teacher Ed Denes was another important influence.
“He was larger than life — literally and figuratively,” Hall says.
Denes organized school talent shows. Hall always had a band. “It was a way I could bring people together,” he notes. “I still do that today.”
After the College of William & Mary — where he majored in music and psychology (and met his wife) — he moved to San Francisco, then Philadelphia.
He’s been there ever since. He joined The War on Drugs — a Philly-based rock band — in 2014.
Hall’s upcoming Levitt gig has roots in his 1990s California days. Playing “straight-ahead jazz,” he and fellow musicians put together Get Up With It, a 10-piece group to explore the “Afro-futuristic space rock” canon of Davis’ music.
When Hall and some of the others moved to Philadelphia and New York, they formed an East Coast version.

“Miles painted with a palette of rhythms,” Hall explains. “It’s a gift for me to play this music, with these people.”
Get Up With It includes guitars, woodwinds, keyboards, brass — and a trio of percussionists.

Get Up With It, in action.
What will it be like for Hall to pay tribute to Miles Davis, just a couple of miles from where he himself grew up?
“It will be pretty emotional,” the drummer admits.
“I think so fondly on my first 18 years of life around there … all the bands I’ve seen, and the experiences I’ve had. To bring my gang here will be fun.”
Doors open at 6 p.m., for the Levitt Pavilion’s May 24 kickoff concert, Charlie Hall’s Get Up With It: A Miles Davis Centennial Celebration. Click here for tickets, and more information.
(“06880” reports regularly on Westport’s entertainment scene — including local and national artists. If you enjoy our coverage, please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

The Levitt Pavilion kicks off its 53rd season on May 24. (Photo/Susan Garment)

Compo Beach, near Schlaet’s Point (Photo/Wendy Levy)
The Westport Dog Festival celebrates 10 years on Sunday, May 17.
That’s 70 dog years.
The annual Westport Weston Chamber of Commerce event is once again set for 10 a.m. to 4 p.m, at every dog’s favorite spot: Winslow Park..
As always there will be goofy competitions, Police K-9 presentations, an obstacle course, kids’ activities, food trucks and more. Gilbert the Party Pig returns too, for children to pet and feed.
There are prizes for best tail wagger, best dressed, best kisser, best trick, best lap dog over 50 pounds, and dog that most looks like its owner.
There will be adoptables too, and information about non-profits.
Surrounding the main activities are over 60 pet-related vendors, picture taking, caricatures, face painting, games, giveaways and food trucks. WEBE 108 will broadcast live.
This year the entrance fee is cashless: credit card and Apple Pay only ($10 per person, $30 for a family of 2 adults and 2 children).
Proceeds benefit nonprofit organizations. So farm over $50,000 has been donated by the Chamber to deserving groups. Click here for more information.

These guys can’t wait to come to the Dog Festival again. (Photo/Charlie Scott)
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It’s been 86 years since Judy Garland sang “Over the Rainbow.” It — and she — are as beloved as ever.
On June 17 (7 p.m.), the Westport Country Playhouse presents “Get Happy!” –Jenna Pastuszek and Broadway’s Joshua Zecher Ross’ 103rd birthday celebration of the great entertainer.
It’s not an impersonation. It’s a playlist filled with beloved classics and forgotten gems, from “The Wizard of Oz,” “Easter Parade,” Judy Live at Carnegie Hall and much more.
Tickets go on sale today (Thursday) at noon. Click here to purchase, and for more information.

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For a song, you can support the Staples High School music program.
The always-spectacular Pops Concert is June 5 (7 p.m, Levitt Pavilion). As always, it’s free — a gift from the Music Department to the town.
But it costs a lot to produce. Which is why local businesses might consider buying an ad in the program book.
Over 400 young musicians are enriched by Staples’ award-winning program. To reach them — and their parents, and everyone else at the Pops — click here to place an ad (or learn more). The deadline is May 22.
Questions? Email staples.music.parents.assn+ads@gmail.com.

Tons of Pops-goers will see your ad.
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Kyle Martino did not learn soccer in the streets of Westport.
But the 1999 Staples High graduate — and Gatorade High School Player of the Year, MLS Rookie of the Year and US men’s national team player, who has gone on to become a broadcaster and soccer entrepreneur — credits pick-up games with athletes of all ages as being a formative part of his development.
So Martino — who recently moved back to Westport — created Street FC. The app hosts street-style pickup games in unexpected spaces, from basketball and tennis courts to rooftops and empty lots, making it easy for anyone to show up and play.
The idea is so good, Martino won $250,000 on “Shark Tank” this winter.
The newest court will launch soon, right up the road. It’s at Goooal Sports (1791 Stratford Ave, Stratford).
Your first game is free. Just download the Street FC app here. Make an account, select “Bridgeport,” then find a game that works for your schedule and skill level.
See you on the pitch!

Street FC in Stratford.
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The next meeting of the Westport Book Shop’s Short Story Club is May 27 (6 p.m.).
With Mother’s Day approaching, the selections’ theme is appropriate: mothers and children. They are:
Registration is required, as space is limited. Call 203-349-5141, or email RSVP@westportbooksaleventures.org.

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Hot on the heels of the Artemis success, the Westport Astronomical Society gets ready for a lecture on “Robotic Planetary Landers.”
Erik Bailey, aerospace engineer and veteran of multiple US Mars landings, will join remotely to survey humanity’s landings on other worlds: the moon, Venus, mars, Titan, Comet 67P, and asteroids Eros, Ryugu and Bennu.
The Bayberry Lane classroom will be open for the May 19 (8 p.m.) event. The talk will also be live-streamed on YouTube and via Zoom Webinar.

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Westport Police made 4 custodial arrests between April 29 and May 5.
A 30-year-old Danbury woman was charged with larceny, conspiracy to commit larceny and risk of injury to a child, following a March shoplifting incident at Ulta Beauty. Total loss due to theft was estimated at $3,157, with some items being put in a stroller. She was held on a $60,000 bond.
Two Waterbury men, ages 20 and 19, were charged with conspiracy to commit larceny of a motor vehicle, after being observed on the Sherwood Island Connecticut. Both posted $7,500 bonds. A 17-year-old juvenile was also involved, and released to a parent.
A 37-year-old Philadelphia man was charge with failure to appear. He was released on a $25,000 bond.
A 32-year-old Brooklyn man was charged with failure to appear, after being incarcerated in New Jersey.
Westport Police also issued these citations:

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We’re used to seeing ducks in the Saugatuck River.
In our backyard — not so much.
But these 2 mallards have been hanging out at Tracy Porosoff’s house.
They’re happy as clams ducks. And pleased as punch to pose for today’s “Westport … Naturally” photo.

(Photo/Tracy Porosoff)
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And finally … we’ve run this clip before.
But — as noted in the item above about Judy Garland’s upcoming Westport Country Playhouse “appearance,” it never gets old.
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At a time of rising antisemitism worldwide, Temple Israel is growing.
The 1,100-family congregation — the largest Jewish one in the state — has grown more than 60% over the past 5 years. They’ve tripled their pre-school, and doubled the Hebrew school. Next month, they welcome their 6th clergy member.
Between youth and adult programs, rites like bar and bat mitzvahs and baby namings, and Shabbat and holiday services, the building teems with activities.
Now Temple Israel is growing in another way.
On Tuesday, they closed on the property next door. Purchasing 6 Coleytown Road — owned by the same family since the 1960s — adds 2 acres to the 6-acre 14 Coleytown Road campus.
It’s a perfect fit physically. The land will fill in the fourth quadrant, just west of the existing land (to the right, driving in).

Temple Israel’s existing property is outlined in blue. The new purchase is in red (lower left).
It’s also a perfect fit dynamically. Rabbi Michael Friedman and the board of directors do not yet know how they’ll utilize the land. But as Temple Israel grows in numbers and activities, there will be no shortage of ideas.
“When we had the opportunity to acquire this, right next door, we realized it’s a once-in-a-lifetime chance,” Rabbi Friedman says. “They’ve been great neighbors, and we hope we’ve been good to them.
“It’s exciting. We recognize the responsibility of planning thoughtfully for a vibrant future.”
Formed in 1949, but without a permanent home for the first 10 years, Temple Israel has over the past years attracted young families, empty nesters and others, beyond its original Westport and Weston base.
The congregation’s footprint has expanded into Wilton, New Canaan. Fairfield, and beyond, Rabbi Friedman notes.

Temple Israel
“Our building and campus gets a lot of use,” he adds. “That’s a feature, not a bug.”
In an email to congregants yesterday, temple officials said: “As we move into the next 75 years of our congregation’s story, we envision a campus that supports the vibrant 21st century Judaism we have created, providing spaces where we can safely and joyfully gather, learn, worship and celebrate.
“There is still important planning work ahead, and we look forward to keeping you informed as conversations continue and next steps unfold. At the same time, we have begun to dream about how this opportunity could take shape — imagining how this space might enhance connection, expand what we are able to offer, and support the evolving needs of our growing community. While it is still early in the process, these initial conversations have been both energizing and inspiring as we consider what is possible.”
As antisemitism rises in the US and around the world, Rabbi Friedman says, “it is particularly meaningful to have hopefulness.”
He sees that hope in the continued growth of Temple Israel — programmatically, spiritually, and now physically too.
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Long Island Sound and Longshore (Photo/Rindy Higgins)