Post Road Real Estate: Year-End Report

Every so often since 2017, alert “06880” reader Bob Weingarten counts the number of “for lease” or “for sale” properties on Post Road East and West.

His most recent survey was last month. Bob says that 54 locations — offices, stores, restaurants, banks and entire buildings — were posted on Post Road East and West.

This is just 2 fewer units from his last count, in February 2023.  There are still multiple large office buildings available, plus a few smaller offices, 3 bank buildings, and other units. (Weingarten did not count available apartments and condominiums).

A few buildings are recently rented, like the old, long-vacant garden market that is now Tacombi restaurant; several smoke shops; nail salons (of course), medical offices, and the new Bond Vet that replaced Freshii.

(Photo/Bob Weingarten)

A few buildings are back on the market, including the former IHOP and then Westport Pancake House.

Also for lease: the large, strategically located and very expensive space that until a few days ago housed Patagonia. For decades previously, it was a bank.

The Amazon Fresh space (previously, Barnes & Noble) is not listed — but there has been no activity there for months.

This shopping center bustled when Barnes & Noble was there. With an empty storefront abandoned by Amazon Fresh: not so much.

Multiple stores have relocated, such as Pottery Barn from Main Street. It replaced Westport Hardware, which moved a few doors west in the same complex.

In the works:  The Clubhouse, a golf simulator and lounge. It’s taking over Pane e Bene restaurant.

“The Clubhouse” will replace the former Pane e Bene restaurant.

“There are lots of changes,” Weingarten summarizes.

“Even so, the number of ‘for lease or for sale’ properties is about the same as it was in 2017.” See below:

  • June 2017: 50
  • April 2019: 65
  • December 2019: 72
  • February 2022: 61
  • February 2023: 56
  • December 2023: 54

(“06880” is your place for local news — including businesses opening and closing, and the stories behind them. If you enjoy our work, please click here to support us. Thank you!)

3 properties available in February 2023 are still on the market. One has been rented. (Photos/Bob Weingarten)

Pics Of The Day #2450

Nash’s Pond, in fog … (Photo/Tricia Summers)

Longshore, in mist … (Photo/Tomoko Meth)

 

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Roundup: $$$: Donated, Found, And Plunged For …

Sustainable Westport says:

“We did it! We have reached our goal of inspiring (over) 150 Westporters to make a gift in support of Sustainable Westport.

“We deeply appreciate every individual who participated in our first-ever Community Giving Challenge.

“Your support helped us raise money to expand our programming in 2024, demonstrated our community’s continued commitment to sustainability, and helped us unlock an additional $10,000 challenge grant from a generous Sustainable Westport donor. When we come together, even small actions have an incredible impact! Thank you, thank you, thank you.”

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More fundraising:

While you were sleeping in on New Year’s Day, dozens of others were performing a mitzvah.

They headed to Compo Beach, and took a polar plunge.

Which they paid for.

Proceeds from the event — sponsored by Temple Israel and the Jewish Federation of Greater Fairfield County — went to the Israel Emergency Fund.

Despite the winter temperatures, that will warm many hearts. (Hat tip: Bryan Bierman)

These Polar Plungers were freezin’ for a reason. 

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This is not a proverb, but perhaps it should be: “If you find money in a tree on New Year’s Day, you will have a very prosperous year.”

And if there was such a saying, then one Westporter — out for a stroll yesterday downtown — would be in for a very lucky 2024 indeed.

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Jake Thaw is going to the College Football Playoff championship.

His University of Michigan Wolverines edged Alabama 27-20 in overtime yesterday, at the Rose Bowl. They’ll face the University of Washington next Monday in Houston (January 8, 8:15 p.m., ESPN).

It almost didn’t happen, though. The only punt that came the 2020 Staples High School graduate’s way was muffed, at the 5-yard line. Thaw did a great job of avoiding a safety, under intense pressure.

Jay Harbaugh — the UM special teams coordinator, and son of head coach Jim Harbaugh — was heavily criticized on social media for allowing Thaw to attempt the catch inside the 10, and not simply letting it bounce.

Jake Thaw, moments before the last-minute punt.

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Bridgewater Associates — the Westport-based world’s largest hedge fund, and the object of so much interest and mystery in that world — is under the media microscope again.

Not long after the publication of Rob Copeland’s tell-almost-all book “The Fund,” a Bloomberg story examines charges against the company of favoritism, age and sex discrimination.

The article includes this description of what goes on inside the office:

Because many employees at Bridgewater are in their 20s and 30s and work long hours in the Connecticut suburbs far outside New York City, romantic relationships are common, people who have worked there said….

And the togetherness extends beyond work. There are almost 100 clubs where employees can do everything from play softball to rescue pets.

Click here for the full story. (Hat tip: Allan Siegert)

Bridgewater’s Nyala Farm headquarters, where romance blooms. (Photo/Nico Eisenberger)

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Bassist/composer/producer Harvie S and guitarist Sheryl Bailey kick off the 2024 Jazz at the Post year this Thursday (January 4, VFW Joseph J. Clinton Post 399; shows at 7:30 and 8:45 p.m.; dinner from 6:30 p.m. on).

The two highly regarded musicians will be joined by saxophonist Greg “The Jazz Rabbi” Wall and drummer Steve Johns.

Reservations are highly recommended: JazzatthePost@gmail.com

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Today’s “Westport … Naturally” image shows 4 very lucky creatures.

All survived Thanksgiving and Christmas. They’re now free to stroll leisurely on Salem Road.

(Photo/Molly Alger)

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And finally … today is the birthday of Roger Miller. He was born in 1936.

He died of lung and throat cancer, at 56. But not before he wrote and recorded these classics:

(Congratulations to Sustainable Westport. To sustain “06880” with a tax-deductible contribution, please click here.)

Superficial Love: Finding Purpose Through Debilitating Disease

Imagine what it’s like to wake up every morning, knowing you’ll have just 10% of the energy you once had.

With your physical and emotional battery so low, it’s a challenge just to eat or brush your teeth.

You seldom leave the house. It’s almost impossible to work. You think often of your old, “regular” life, when you traveled, hung out with friends, and got up the next morning to do it all again.

Caroline Riddle Ranere doesn’t imagine that. It’s the reality of her life.

And it has been for 17 years.

It’s a far cry from her Staples High School years. Back then the 1993 graduate played violin in the orchestra, performed with the Academy of Dance, and took Saturday classes at the Manhattan School of Music.

Caroline Riddle dancing as the mother in “The Nutcracker,” 1991.

She headed to Furman University. After graduation, she moved to San Francisco. She’s now in Baltimore.

But for nearly 2 decades, she’s suffered from ME/CFS. Myalgic encephalomyelitis/ chronic fatigue syndrome is characterized by extreme fatigue. It worsens with activity, and does not improve with rest.

Caroline is mostly homebound. “My iPad is my world,” she says.

But lately, that same device has given her an outlet. More of a life. And hope.

Caroline’s symptoms began around 2006 — the year she was married.

Caroline and her husband, just before the onset of ME/CFS.

At first she did not feel well. She had trouble working as an interior designer. and going to the gym. 

She pushed through her honeymoon, but soon had her first “crash” — post-exertional malaise, it’s called.

“You’re getting older,” doctors told her.

“I was in my 30s!” Caroline says.

Unable to offer a diagnosis, doctors sent her to a mental health therapist. Even family and friends did not understand what she was going through.

Caroline spent 10 “pretty dark” years. In 2010 she retired from a work project. “I was devastated to let down a client. But I just didn’t have it in me,” she recalls.

Caroline Ranere’s work, as an interior designer.

Finally, in 2015, she was diagnosed with ME/CFS.

She was lucky. Living not far from Stanford University, she entered its clinic.

At last, “everything I said was understood. No one looked at me like I was a head case. It was the best appointment I’d ever had.”

The cause of the disease is unclear. One theory, Caroline says, is that she never recovered from previously undiagnosed Epstein-Barr virus, or mononucleosis.

What is known is that if ME/CFS is not diagnosed early, a patient is unaware of the “crashes” that can occur — and that over-exertion can cause them.

A crash can lower the baseline of functioning for several days, weeks, even months. That leads to more severe symptoms, a prolonged recovery, even an irreversible decline in health.

Caroline would rest all week before a dinner with friends. She would then over-exert herself, causing a downward spiral of even more fatigue.

ME/CFS is called an “invisible illness,” because sufferers often look “normal.”

At least 3.3 million Americans have ME/CFS. Caroline suspects the number is far greater, because long COVID is believed to be a new form of the disease.

When Caroline got the coronavirus, she was prescribed Paxlovid. For the first time in 17 years, she felt “like a normal person.”

But the feeling did not last. It was just a tantalizing taste of her life before ME/CFS.

Caroline Ranere’s self-portrait.

Three years ago, during a particularly bleak period, Caroline picked up her iPad, and drew.

She liked what she created. Finally, she had something positive to share on social media.

She could draw for hours, without zapping her energy. At times, in fact, she felt better after drawing.

She drew almost every day. Then, she realized, she could sell her work online.

And those designs could be printed and sold on a variety of products.

Six months ago, she started a website. Superficial Love is filled with Caroline’s work: prints (acrylic, canvas, metal, silk and wood); tapestries and wall hangings; backpacks, bags and jewelry; keychains; iPhone cases and laptop sleeves; t-shirts, sweatshirts, hoodies, dresses, pants and footwear; pillows, candles, and more.

One of Caroline Ranere’s art prints …

But Caroline’s website is more than just an outlet for her brand.

It’s a testament to what she can accomplish, despite suffering from a debilitating disease.

“Behind every post is a struggle, a victory against odds you might not fully comprehend,” she writes.

“Each day, I balance sharing my creativity with conserving energy just to make it through. When I’m silent online, it’s not a lack of interest in your lives; it’s a battle for my own.”

Though she yearns for the days of active friendships, her website has become a way to connect with others. She draws sustenance — if not energy — from hearing other people’s stories, and knowing that both her products and her story inspire them.

If Caroline has one message, it’s this: “Those of us with ME/CFS are not lazy, useless, weak or mentally unstable. But when no one understands our struggle, we lose our identity. Whatever we’ve achieved just fades away.

“It takes effort to find happiness and purpose. But we can find it.”

She is fortunate to have found something that gives her life meaning — despite the need to constantly rest, save her energy, realize her limitations, and balance what she wants to do with what she can do.

… and 3 pillows.

She feels fortunate too that her husband, his family, and her longtime Westport friend Leah Nash have supported her strongly.

Her hometown holds a special place in Caroline’s heart. She has few memories of the past 17 years, because she has been homebound and spent so little time with others.

The people she grew up with here “know who I was, and what I did,” she says.

Meanwhile, while she waits for a cure, she vows to live a life “with purpose and fulfillment.”

Superficial Love proves to Caroline — every exciting, yet exhausting, day — that she is doing exactly that.

(To learn more about Superficial Love, click here. For Caroline Ranere’s Instagram, click here.) 

(“06880” covers the interesting and inspiring lives of many Staples High School graduates. Please click here to support our hyper-local work. Thank you!)

Pic Of The Day #2449

Lynn Flint was intrigued by these Frostbiters, seen today in their “Morning After” race from Cedar Point Yacht Club on Saugatuck Shores.

She was also interested in this collection of shells, in the foreground. “They are not typical of our beaches,” she notes.

(Photo/Lynn Flint)

Roundup: Polar Plunge, Jake Thaw, Nile Rodgers, Brad Tursi …

Sure, it’s short notice.

But you’re going to be spending a very short time in the water, right?

Temple Israel and the Jewish Federation of Greater Fairfield County are sponsoring a Polar Plunge today — Monday, January 1, 11 a.m., at Compo Beach.

It’s a fundraiser for the Israel Emergency Fund.

Donations will help pay for evacuation, transport, housing and support for frontline communities; trauma relief and psychosocial support; emergency medical services and health care, volunteers, and much more, for victims of Hamas’ October 7 attacks.

Click here to register, and more information.

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Whether you’re a football fan or not, Westporters should pay attention to today’s national semifinal game between #1 Michigan and #4 Alabama (January 1, 5 p.m., ESPN).

On the roster for the undefeated Wolverines (that’s Michigan, for you non-football fans):  Jake Thaw.

A Staples High School Class of 2020 graduate (and football and basketball star), he’s a punt return specialist and wide receiver.

Jake is a senior, in the Ross School of Business.

Let’s go, Michigan!

Jake Thaw

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If you invited Nile Rodgers to your New Year’s Eve party, and he said he was already taken: He’s telling the truth.

Our Westport neighbor spent last night in Hollywood. He performed with his band Chic, as part of ABC-TV’s awkwardly named say-goodbye-to-’23 show, the awkwardly named “Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve with Ryan Seacrest.”

Here’s a screenshot, in case you really need proof:

(Photo/Matthew Mandell)

Not to be outdone, CBS featured another Westporter: Brad Tursi.

The 1997 Staples High graduate (and former soccer star) is lead guitarist and vocalist with Old Dominion, the multiple award-winning country band.

Brad Tursi. (Photo/Matthew Mandell; hat tips, Neil Brickley and Karen Kramer)

If you know of any other local New Year’s Eve entertainers we missed — José Feliciano? Keith Richards? — click “Comments” below.

ENCORE: CBS featured another Westporter last night too: meteorologist Lonnie Quinn.

Our had a busy night on the tube, for sure. And Matthew Mandell managed to catch all of it.

Lonnie Quinn (left). (Photo courtesy of Matthew Mandell)

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Like many restaurants, La Plage celebrated New Year’s Eve with a special party.

The staff was ready. Here was the scene, a few hours before midnight:

After a brief break starting today, the Longshore restaurant will reopen January 5 for dinner, with a new winter menu.

Speaking of restaurants: Don’t forget “06880”‘s guide. Click here — or click the “Restaurants” tab at the top of our blog (or the bottom of our iPhone or Android app), for a list of local spots, complete with menu and website links.

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Want to ring in the new year with a nice oil painting of Westport?

How about this one by Arnold Knauth. It’s listed on eBay for $595 (or best offer):

Don’t recognize it?

Neither do I.

The listing says “Westport, CT.” It looks more like Westport, VT. (Except there is no such place.)

Mary Gai — who spotted the artwork, and sent the link to “06880” — wonders if it could be the now-flattened hilltop where the Gault development is now.

Seems kind of mountainous for that location.

If readers have any idea where this could be in Westport — or where else it could show — click “Comments” below.

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Tammy Barry checks in with the first “Westport … Naturally” feature of 2024. It shows the last kayak of 2023, for these folks:

(Photo/Tammy Barry)

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And finally … in honor of today’s Polar Bear Plunge (story above):

(If your New Year’s resolution is to support “06880,” you’re in luck. Just click here. Thank you!)

 

Happy New Year!

For several years, “06880” rang in the new year with an iconic photo: The “blue marble” image of Earth, suspended in space.

Taken by Apollo 17 astronauts in December 1972, for half a century it symbolized the beauty and fragility of our planet, and the interconnectedness of us all.

Last year, I went intergalactic.

In the 17 months since the James Webb Space Telescope beamed its first pictures back to us, the world has been mesmerized.

We thought we knew how vast and amazing the universe is.

Now, we realize, we don’t know the half — or the hundredth, or squintillionth — of it.

Gazing at photos like the one above, we realize how insignificant we truly are. Our planet is just one grain of sand, on an obscure beach, in an out-of-the-way location.

We really don’t matter at all.

Except to us.

Take a look at that photo again.

That landscape of “mountains” and “valleys” speckled with glittering stars is actually the edge of a nearby, young, star-forming region in the Carina Nebula. For the first time, we see stars being born.

We look billions of light years into the past. That’s crazy stuff.

So — back here on Earth, in our tiny Zip Code in our small state in our big country in our average-sized planet — we have to wonder: What actually matters?

Is it whether we put a baseball field next to a school, or keep a garden? Is it losing 44 parking spaces downtown? Is it the inconvenience of traffic on our roads, or a neighbor who chops down most of his trees?

The answer is: Yes.

These things matter.

They matter because they are part of our lives here in Westport. Sure, the universe seems endless; we still can’t really conceive of the fourth dimension, and our universe itself may be part of another, “living” life form.

In other words, the Westport — and the world — we know may just be atoms in an infinitely more complex something-or-other.

But all that’s for another day (or time).

Meanwhile, we look for the answers to life out there. But right now, it’s our own lives to lead, right here in “06880.”

Let’s lead them well.

And so … bringing us back to what we know best … here’s that beautiful blue marble, once more.

Pic Of The Day #2448

Levon looks ahead, at Grace Salmon Park (Photo/Patricia McMahon)

Photo Challenge #470

My Christmas gift to “06880” readers was a few broad hints to last week’s Photo Challenge.

There would have been no way otherwise for anyone to guess what Jonathan Alloy’s white-on-white photo showed. (Click here to see.)

Thanks to my helpful suggestions (we can do this activity “by the shore,” and alone or “with pals”), nearly 2 dozen folks nailed the answer: the Westport PAL skating rink, at Longshore.

Congratulations to Fred Cantor, Derek Fuchs, Michael Szeto, Lynn Untermeyer Miller, Susan Iseman, Linda Gates, Joan Ryan, Jonathan McClure, Tom Feeley, Andrew Colabella, Gloria Gouveia, Lynn Flaster Paul, Beth Berkowitz, Michelle Garvey, Jalna Jaeger, Rob Hauck, Ralph Balducci, Richard Hyman, Pam Toney, Mary Ann Batsell, Ann Bacharach and Rick Benson.

I didn’t expect any gifts in return.

Which is good, because none of them got me anything.

This week’s Photo Challenge is a classic.

We all pass it often. But do we really notice it?

If you know where in Westport you’d see this, click “Comments” below.

(Photo/Frank Rosen)

(Here’s a challenge: You’ve got a few more hours to support “06880” this year — and get a tax-deductible benefit. Please click here to help. Thank you!)

Roundup: Wynston Browne; 2024 …

If you’re looking for an inspiring story to end 2023 — or a great way to ring in ’24 — it’s right here.

Yesterday, News12 aired a warm, insightful and important story about Wynston Browne.

As first reported on “06880” in 2022, the 16-year-old Staples High School junior has non-speaking autism.

But boy, can he talk.

With the help of a spelling device and communication specialist, he has spent the past year and a half letting the world know that he has a brilliant mind, a kind and loving spirit, and the same dreams as any kid.

He wants to be challenged in school — not presumed to be stupid or incompetent, because he can’t speak out loud.

He wants to have friends. He wants to sit in the cafeteria and laugh with them, not be laughed at.

News12’s Mark Sudol story brings Wynston’s story to a broad audience.

“I like to be called Winnie, because winners never give up,” he says.

Click here to see Winnie’s News12 story. It may be the best 5 minutes you spend in 2023.

Or ’24.

(To read more “06880” stories on Winnie Browne, click here.)

Wynston Browne

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2024 is not yet here, but you’ve probably already been wished “Happy New Year!” by many people.

But let “06880” be the first blog to do so.

And Weston’s Jolantha is definitely the first pig.

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Speaking of the holiday: If it’s New Year’s, it must be SyFy’s annual “Twilight Zone” marathon.

The annual event — an homage to the show and its creator, former Westporter Rod Serling — began yesterday. It runs through 3 a.m. on Tuesday.

Click here for the full schedule.  (In case you’re wondering: “A Stop at Willoughby” — the classic Westport-themed episode — aired yesterday.)

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The sun finally broke through Friday.

Toni Simonetti was at the Library Riverwalk behind the Levitt Pavilion, to capture the moment, for “Westport … Naturally.”

So were her husband and dog.

(Photo/Toni Simonetti)

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And finally … one pretty old, and one only relatively old, songs to ring out the “old” year:

(Happy New Year! We promise, this is the last request to support “06880” you’ll get in 2023. Thank you!)