Tag Archives: Bankside condos

Pic Of The Day #2414

When Howard Edelstein made a Starbucks run at 6:30 this morning, he got an unexpected treat: this view of the Beaver Moon, shining brightly as it set over the new Bankside House condos on Wilton Road.

How bright was it? According to the Old Farmer’s Almanac, this was just 2 hours after its brightest glow in all of November.

PS: The Beaver Moon takes its name from early Native American tribes and American colonists. This is the time when beavers begin sheltering in their lodges after gathering enough food to last the winter. Fur trappers, meanwhile, used this time to hunt beavers for their pelts.

(Photo/Howard Edelstein)

Pic Of The Day #2122

West bank of the Saugatuck River: Bartaco, Bankside and more (Photo/Rowene Weems)

Bankside Condos To Rise On River

To everyone’s surprise, one unintended consequence of COVID-19 has been a sizzling local real estate market.

Tucked into that surprise: A luxury condominium project that was given up for dead has roared back to life.

Bankside’s 12 units will rise soon on Wilton Avenue, at the site of the now-demolished Save the Children building. The design takes advantage of the Saugatuck River location. There is only one residence per floor — and stunning views.

Artist’s rendering of the Bankside condos.

Bankside began in 2013. David Waldman — the developer of Bedford Square, and many other local projects — joined with Greenfield Partners (whose offices are in nearby National Hall) to buy the Save the Children site.

Waldman and Greenfield hired Roger Ferris + Partners — the architectural firm that designed many new buildings on the river’s west bank — to bring their vision of a spectacular new development to life. It included a new office building, and a land swap to create a right-turn lane at the notorious Wilton Road/Post Road West bottleneck.

The office building was built — and has already been sold. But the 7-year residential slog included the town’s denial of the land swap, and a drying up of the luxury condo market.

A year ago Waldman, Greenfield and their investors were ready to sell that building site at a loss.

Then coronavirus struck. Suddenly the suburbs seemed more attractive than cities. The housing market changed dramatically.

Waldman found a new partner. He sold the land to Eric O’Brien — owner of the innovative New Haven building firm Urbane — but stayed on as part of the development group.

Work begins soon on Ferris’ design. Unlike most condos, 10 of the 12 units will share only floors and ceilings — no walls. Windows will look out on the river and downtown on one side, woods and hills on another. Patios of up to 800 square feet front the water.

The condos feature outdoor living on the river.

Ten of the units are 2,500 square feet, including 2 bedrooms and a den. The other 2 units are 3,400 square feet, with 3 bedrooms. Prices range from $2.25 million to $4.25 million.

Completion is scheduled for spring of 2022. Click here for more details.