Monthly Archives: February 2012

The Buzz About Real Estate

There’s a buzz in the Westport real estate market. It’s both real (the sound of new construction) and metaphorical (a swarm of buyers).

My anecdotal observation of the market — watching what’s going on around town, scanning sales numbers and prices — was confirmed by Karen Scott.

Karen — of KMS Partners at Coldwell Banker — is one of Westport’s savviest, energetic and experienced realtors. (Full disclosure: She’s also a friend. I have coached her 2 sons on the Staples soccer team, and am a huge fan of the entire Scott family.)

Karen says there’s a reason the local real estate market shows life for the first time since the tumble crash of 2007-08.

Interest rates are low, and should remain so for a while.

Some buyers are tired of renting. Others are tired of searching, and willing to commit.

Even the weather helps. Our North Carolina-ish winter has not only encouraged people to go outside and be active; it’s also kept them away from the ski slopes, giving them time search homes on the internet, then drive around to actually see them.

This Nantucket Shingle-stylel residence "captures water views from nearly every room." It's listed at $8,850,000.

In past years, the “spring market” — often the most active of the year — has taken place in May and June. This year, Karen says, it’s already begun.

Agents, mortgage lenders, buyers and sellers — all sense an increased level of activity” since New Year’s. “People are negotiating and making offers,” Karen says. “They’re no longer sitting on the fence.”

New construction is hot, particularly in the $2 million range.

“Westport has a love/hate relationship with new construction,” Karen says. “But for a while, there was no construction at all. It’s back, but with smaller homes and on smaller pieces of property” — 5,000 to 6,000 square feet, finished on 3 to 4 floors. The footprint is smaller than before, and there’s more interest in energy efficiency.

Westport remains attractive to New Yorkers and transferees from other parts of the country, Karen notes. We continue to attract global clients, with Chinese buyers new to the mix.

Like other buyers, they come for the schools, the proximity to New York and places like Yale, and the amenities.

Looking to enjoy the "Compo Beach lifestyle"? This house can be yours for $1,849,000.

“People love Compo and Longshore, the arts, the sports, everything for kids,” she says. Among the hot areas: the beach, and neighborhoods like Evergreen and Imperial Avenue that are close to town.

Saugatuck — with its new restaurants and other construction — is also drawing attention from buyers.

Tax rates too are very favorable — particularly in comparison with Westchester.

Sellers include empty nesters and homeowners downsizing, as well as the converse: young, growing families looking for bigger digs.

Westport has some foreclosures — though, Karen says, not on the scale of other places.

Prices have been fairly stable. Karen characterizes less-than-$1 million homes as “very hot.” The $1 million to $1.5 million range is “competitive.” Those between $2 million and $3 million are “tough sales.” The upper end — $5 million and up — has seen good recent action.

This "exquisitve Victorian farmhouse" recently sold for $2,495,000.

Despite the renewed interest, Karen is realistic. “Buying and selling in Westport is still a big financial transaction. People are cautious. They’re doing their due diligence more thoroughly than ever before.” Some good news: From a lending standpoint, Westport is considered a stable market.

Real estate is one of Westport’s favorite games. For several years, we’ve been on the losing end of that game.

Finally, it seems, buyers and sellers are playing ball again.

Amazon: Beware!

Just before Christmas, Amazon took some well-deserved flak for introducing an app that encouraged shoppers to walk into a store, scan a product’s barcode, then order it online — from Amazon — at a discount.

At least one Westport business is fighting back.

Alert “06880” reader Lori Goertz snapped this photo at the Westport Music Center:

“I love the sign’s honesty and fortitude,” Lori wrote.

So do I.

For decades, the Westport Music Center has provided sheet music, instrument rentals and repairs, and much more.

With this kind of attitude, it will be around for many decades to come.

Remembering Dick Sands

It’s been years since Dick Sands lived in Westport. But news of his death on Friday — one week shy of his 85th birthday — reminds thousands of teenagers from the 1960s and ’70s of the impact he had on our lives.

Dick was not a teacher, a sports coach or a clergyman. He was an orthodontist.

More than that, he was an orthodontist back when the tools of the trade were heavy metal contraptions, ugly rubber bands, and similar devices that seemed to come from the days of Torquemada.

Those were the days.

He was, for quite a while, the orthodontist in town. Every kid needing braces went to him; every kid had similar stories of pliers and wires, aching gums and embarrassingly closed mouths.

Looking back, of course, we realize that the orthodontics Dick practiced were the best of its time. Our parents wanted us to have straight teeth and broad smiles; an added benefit would be fewer dental problems as we got older.

Dick retired a while ago, and with his wife — former teacher Joan Sands — moved to Florida. He left behind a thriving orthodontics practice — and thousands of men and women, now in late middle age, with pretty nice chops.

Here is his complete obituary:

Richard H. Sands, orthodontist and co-founder of renowned New-Conn Orthodontist Study group, died on February 10, at his home in Sarasota, Florida. He was 84.

Dr. Sands graduated from Poly Prep High School in Brooklyn, Amherst College, and Columbia University School of Dental and Oral Surgery. He served in the Navy as a nurse and physician’s assistant, caring for the sick and wounded at the end of and shortly after World War II. A lover of jazz and classical music, Dr. Sands was an accomplished clarinetist and saxophonist, and played in the Navy Swing Dance band.

He was devoted to his profession, publishing many papers on new treatments, organizing regional and national conventions, and serving as an officer of numerous professional committees and societies.

His military service gave him a love of travel, and he and his family traveled extensively throughout the world both before and after his retirement.

He is survived by his beloved wife of 59 years, Joan; his daughter Caren; his two sons, Gordon and Jeffrey, and seven grandchildren. A memorial service will be held on Monday, February 13, at 11 a.m. at Temple Sinai of Sarasota. In lieu of flowers, donations in Dr. Sands’ memory may be made to the Neuro Challenge Foundation: www.neurochallenge.org/neu/donations

County Coupon War Heats Up

Groupon‘s first results as a public company disappointed investors this week.

But the website is not the only daily discount deal in town. Angelo Zucaro is trying to replicate the erstwhile high flyer, with a more local focus.

FairfieldCoupon.com takes the Groupon concept — one offer a day — and gives it a community twist.

“Discounts from Groupon and Living Social come from New York and other parts of Connecticut,” Angelo says. “Ours are definitely Fairfield County. Every email from us is relevant to you.”

He mentions the tanning salon Sunsations — with locations in Westport and Norwalk — and a ballroom dance studio (offering a perfect-for-Valentine’s Day discount) among the businesses with clear local appeal.

Angelo knows Fairfield County — and business. A 1994 graduate of Staples (where he served as football captain), he majored in accounting at the University of Buffalo. He went into tech sales, and helped build a pair of businesses: Indeed.com, a job search engine in Stamford, and Dattobackup.com, in Norwalk.

As a local company, Angelo says, FairfieldCoupon’s sales staff can personally talk to the businesses they solicit. “Groupon makes phone calls from Chicago or New York. If I call on a merchant and see he’s in an unsafe location, I won’t promote the deal.”

Angelo Zucaro

Businesses like physical therapists and personal trainers are good targets for his company. Restaurants, he says, are great — but difficult to get.

“They have fixed costs,” Angelo notes. “They want flexibility on our splits, and on what they can give the customer. But our consumer wants a 50% discount. We tell them there’s no upfront costs, and this is a way of getting their name out there.”

Sometimes that approach works. But to meet that demand, Angelo says, he may sometimes eat the cost himself.

Angelo admits, “we’re late in the game.” However, he says, “we’ll get a good following.”

If so, Groupon’s weak earnings may not be its only bad news.

Intrepid Entrepreneur Wanted

Alert “06880” reader Melissa Ceriale and her son 10-year-old son Jack recently spent 2 months in Paris. In between museum and Eiffel Tower trips they discovered Oya Café, an “out-of-the-way but amazing games shop.”

Inside are floor-to-ceiling displays of board and card games from around the world, and for all ages. They’re all available to rent, for an hour or an evening. You also pay 5 euros to sit and play for as long as you want.

Inside Oya Cafe.

There are competitive games, educational games, group collaboration games, war games, animal games — the variety seems endless.

The expert staff helps with everything, from selection to rules and questions.

Drinks (non-alcoholic) are served. Snacks too, but limited to avoid messes on tables.

It’s a very popular place for a non-custodial parent to spend an evening with children, Melissa says — much more interactive than a movie or play area.

Melissa adds: “I toss this out there as it is an interesting retail venue, one that could perhaps be of potential in a family community such as ours. Maybe there’s an entrepreneurial reader out there looking for the next big thing to hit our shores.”

What do you think, Westport? Is this just the thing for our next vacant storefront — perhaps Achorn’s, Talbots or the Liquor Locker?

Nah.  Probably another clothing chain.

Main Street Moves

Petula Clark sang about a downtown where you can go “when you’re alone and life is making you lonely.”

Westport’s downtown is getting a little more lonely — at least for family-owned businesses. This morning, WestportNow reports that — after 85 years — Achorn’s is leaving. Its new location: Playhouse Square. Its reason: “extremely high rent.”

A Main Street fixture for decades -- and a sight soon to vanish. (Photo/Joseph Cole for The Daily Westport)

Coupled with the relocation of Liquor Locker (to Compo Shopping Center), there will soon be only 3 independently owned businesses on Main Street, WestportNow says: Oscar’s, Westport Pizzeria and Francois DuPont Jewelers.

Toss in the consolidation of Talbots — it’s abandoned the original Remarkable Book Shop building on the corner of Main Street and Parker Harding Plaza, and move all its women’s wear into the former (and connected) Record Hunter store next door — and Main Street will soon have a decidedly different look, and feel.

Is it one that’s — in Petula Clark’s words — “alone and lonely”? Or are “extremely high rents,” the disappearance of family-owned stores, and the proliferation and/or consolidation of chains simply the way of the 2012 world?

When Postmen Really Carried The Mail

Last month the Westport Post Office moved to newer, smaller quarters. The old Post Road building seems like the perfect PO — and it seems to have been around forever.

Really, though, it was built “only” in 1935 (as a WPA project, for all you anti-socialists.)

Before that, mail delivery in Westport was a different affair. 86-year-old Elwood Betts, an amateur historian, recalls the life and times of rural mail carrier Harry Brown Fairchild — Elwood’s “Uncle Harry.”

Harry graduated from Staples High School in 1897. There were only 4 others in his senior class.

Harry Brown Fairchild, as a young man.

He inherited a large farm from his father, but he had neither the interest nor training to continue.

In 1901, 21-year-old Harry began his career as a rural mail carrier. For the first 3 years he traveled his 26-mile route in different ways: horse and buggy, bicycle, even walking (in winter).

In 1904 he acquired a car. He was paid a mileage allowance to use it.

His first route had 90 families. Later, it grew to 1,300 customers.

Harry was more than a mail deliverer, Elwood says. He was also a “town crier,” bringing news of the day. And he took grocery orders, delivering food to shut-ins.

He had one of the first telephones in town, and was called upon to summon doctors or call in other emergencies for people with no other means to communicate.

Harry Fairchild, in his Model 10 Buick, 1914.

Harry used his own car to deliver mail through 1942, when he retired. He estimated he covered 318,000 miles, and delivered 5 million letters and packages during his 41-year career.

One of his customers was William S. Hart. The Broadway and silent movie star lived here with his mother and sister.

Harry said that another customer — E.M. Asche — was the 1st artist to make his home here. Others followed, and that (according to Harry) was the start of Westport’s fame as an artists’ colony.

Harry’s hobbies were traveling to New York on Sundays, horse racing, flower shoes and county fairs.

He died on April 17, 1954.

By then, the US Postal Service was using mail trucks. Plenty of Westporters had their own phones. Mailmen did not deliver groceries.

And the downtown post office was already nearly 2 decades old.

Harry Brown Fairchild, distinguished mail carrier.

Going To The Can

Alert “06880” reader Kerith Harding asks:

Have you noticed the sudden disappearance of the trash can that was in the 2nd of the 2 grassy seating areas along the river near Parker Harding Plaza? I think there may even have been one by the tables at the far end that has disappeared as well.

It makes taking a walk along the river and disposing of one’s dog-poop bags, Starbucks and yogurt cups a bit more challenging, as it is no fun to have to navigate across the parking lot, dog or children in tow, to find another one.  What’s up with this?!

I haven’t been down to the river’s edge since last summer. Even if I had, I doubt I’d have noticed the vanishing cans.

but thanks, Kerith, for asking. And for sending along photographic evidence — including what looks like an extra can at Starbucks.

Mystery solved?

Clockwise from upper left: The lone trash can left on the Parker Harder Plaza river; Haley where a can once sat; there used to be one here too, Kerith says; 2 cans, for some unknown reason, at Starbucks.

Broadway Boys Are Back In Town

For Broadway music, you can go to Broadway.

Or Broadway can come to you.

This Sunday (February 12, 4 p.m., Staples High School), the Broadway Boys — “the hottest male voices currently working on the New York stage” — return to Westport.

And by “return,” I mean that literally.

Musical director and keyboardist Justin Paul, bassist Dan Asher and drummer Drew McKeon are Staples grads. Guitarist Jeremy Goldsmith grew up in Weston.

The quartet drives the Boys’ show, combining scintillating harmonies with pop, funk, gospel, jazz, folk, pop R&B, Latin — and of course show tunes.

An added attraction: over a dozen Staples Players — some of them destined for Broadway themselves — will join the Broadway Boys onstage for a pop/gospel song written by Justin Paul and his musical partner, Benj Pasek.

It’s a fitting combination. Justin is a former Staples Player, while Dan and Drew played in the pit for many productions.

The group’s goal is to spread “wonderful music from the Broadway repertoire — both classic and contemporary — across the country,” Justin says.

They also hope to get younger generations excited about Broadway. The show is a fundraiser for Staples Players and the Northeast Childrens Theatre Company, a new non-profit founded by Justin’s brother Tyler Paul. Both organizations are filled with youngsters who love Broadway, and its music.

“We love reaching young people,” Justin says. “That’s why it’s so exciting to come back to Staples. It’s even more exciting to actually perform with these amazing, dynamic and talented high school performers.”

Justin Paul

The Broadway Boys perform all over the country. But, Justin says — without too much bias — “I truly believe Staples is a unique place. The tradition of producing wonderfully trained, absurdly talented and highly skilled musical theater performers is incredible.

“I always feel rejuvenated when I work with high school students. I get a new love and respect for this art form from them. They’re not jaded, bitter or ‘over it.’ Their excitement and wonder about the theater is contagious.

“Getting up on stage — my old stage — with them and making music together is what collaboration, joy and theater is all about.”

The Broadway Boys earn raves wherever they perform. On Sunday, the performance is right here in our — and their — backyard.

(Click here for ticket information. Among the Staples Players scheduled to appear: Gregg Bonti, Allie Daut, Charlie Greenwald, Danielle Honigstein, Tyler Jent, August Laska, Grace McDonald-Seidner, Liam Orly, Alexandra Rappaport, Sami Schwaeber, Ryan Shea, Clay Singer, Michael Sixsmith and Jamie Yarmoff.)

Fine To Park Here

On the grand list of Spectacularly Selfish Things, parking in a handicap spot stands near the top.

So I was very impressed with this photo, sent in by alert “06880” reader Alan Beasley (not the pediatrician — there are 2 Al Beasleys in town):

This was clearly taken someplace other than Westport.

A $1000 fine!

That would certainly free up some spots around town, no?