
Ruth Steinkraus Cohen Bridge, and National Hall … (Photo/Joel Treisman)

… and nearby, tonight’s pink sky over Church Lane (Photo/David Martin)

Ruth Steinkraus Cohen Bridge, and National Hall … (Photo/Joel Treisman)

… and nearby, tonight’s pink sky over Church Lane (Photo/David Martin)
Comments Off on Pics Of The Day #2812
Posted in Downtown, Pic of the Day
Tagged Church Lane, National Hall, Ruth Steinkraus Cohen Bridge
The other day, “06880” noted some changes on the west side of the Saugatuck River.
Saugatuck River Caffe has replaced Winfield Street Deli. Stephen Kempson is expanding into the former Age of Reason.
And AIG is renovating National Hall, for corporate offices.
The building that began as a 19th-century bank, newspaper office, town meeting hall, and the first site of Staples High School, was most recently the site of several restaurants (The Meatball Shop, The ‘Port, Zanghi …).
It was also a boutique hotel — the Inn at National Hall — developed by tour company owner Arthur Tauck.
But that almost did not happen.
When Tauck bought the building, it had served for decades as the Fairfield Furniture store.
All along, bird droppings accumulated on the roof. It was almost enough to cause irreversible structural damage.
But Tauck persevered. The building was saved. Today, it is one of the most iconic sights in town.
Hard to believe that for years, this was the view we saw:

(Photo courtesy of Christopher Maroc/Facebook)
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In walkable cities around the world, bridges connect one side of a waterway to another.
Venice’s Rialto, Florence’s Ponte Vecchio, Pari’s Pont Neuf, and just about any bridge in Amsterdam, are wonderful connections for strolling, shopping and dining.
In Westport, the Ruth Steinkraus Cohen Bridge might as well be the George Washington or Triborough, in terms of pedestrians’ willingness to cross it.
It does not unite the two sides of the Saugatuck River. Instead — in our minds, at least — it separates them.

The Ruth Steinkraus Cohen Bridge spans — but does not really connect — two sides of the river. (Photo/Harrison Gordon)
Try this test: When you hear “downtown,” what comes to mind? Main Street, Church Lane, Parker Harding Plaza, the Library — right?
You probably don’t think of the west bank, just a few yards away.
However, a few recent developments might bring a new focus to the other side of the river.
Stephen Kempson is expanding. The British custom tailor is adding 700 square feet, in space previously occupied by Age of Reason.
Several years ago, Kempson inquired about the property. Then COVID hit. As parents searched for educational toys for their homebound children, business boomed.
But in April, after 40 years, owner Nina Berger closed her store.
Kempson is now adding a custom women’s collection, with exciting colors and textures. Renovations should be completed by mid-September.

Post Road West, reflected in the Stephen Kempson window. (Photo/Dan Woog)
A replacement for Winfield Street Delicatessen, next door to Stephen Kempson, will open before that.
The owners of Arezzo — the Italian restaurant around the corner — were eager to take that space. They’re adding salads, sandwiches, paninis and more to the breakfast and lunch menu.
That’s not all. Bella Bridesmaids took over the place next door to it. The Lifeworx eldercare agency expanded too.
Westport River Gallery and Laura Bazante Stylist continue to thrive. So does Noya Jewelry, across Riverside Avenue.
Across the street, work continues on National Hall. The former site of several restaurants — before that, a boutique hotel, furniture store, and (much earlier), a bank, newspaper office and the town’s meeting hall — will soon become corporate offices for AIG.
That won’t bring anyone through its doors. But it will provide a steady base of customers for businesses nearby.

National Hall (Photo/Dave Dellinger)
The changes on the west bank of the Saugatuck River are exciting. They’ll be followed (at some point) by new parking options at the Parker Harding and Jesup Green lots.
Will all that be enough to entice folks to walk a few yards over the Saugatuck River bridge — about the same distance as from Anthropologie on Main Street, to Cold Fusion?
I don’t know.
And I know the Ruth Steinkraus Cohen Bridge will never be as beautiful as the Rialto, Ponte Vecchio or Pont Neuf,
But it’s a lot nicer than the George Washington or Triborough.
(Every day, “06880” covers Westport retail, restaurants, real estate and more. Please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

Will humans follow dogs across the Ruth Steinkraus Cohen Bridge? (Photo/Maxx Crowley)

Foggy Westport Library café …

… and downtown …

,,, and National Hall (Photos/Lynn Untermeyer Miller)
Posted in Downtown, Library, Pic of the Day, Weather
Tagged National Hall, Westport Library cafe
First it was National Hall. The handsome brick building on the west side of the Saugatuck River housed — among other things — a bank, newspaper, meeting hall, and (in 1884) the first few months of Horace Staples’ new school.
In the 1900s it became Fairfield Furniture. Painted white, its 3 floors were filled with — you guessed it — sofas, tables and the like.
The roof was filled with something else: a century of bird droppings.
When the Tauck family considered buying it in the late 1980s, that almost became a structural-defect deal-breaker.
But the Taucks persevered. Their painstaking renovation returned it to its original splendor, this time as a boutique hotel and high-end restaurant.
In the years since, the rechristened National Hall has been the site of other restaurants, offices and a real estate firm.
Last week it — well, the top floor window and adjacent molding — was the subject of our Photo Challenge. (Click here to see.)
Fred Cantor, Rick Leonard, Diane Silfen, Andrew Colabella, Molly Alger, Jonathan McClure, Jim Dickenson, Seth Braunstein, Kenny Gilbertie, Jodie Aujla and Clark Thiemann quickly knew the answer.
Most of them are longtime Westporters. All have, I am sure, sat in traffic often, gazing up at that sight: one of our town’s most historic structures.
Speaking of history: Who remembers Ross Perot’s run for president in 1996? (I didn’t; I thought his only attempt was in ’92.)
It lives on in Westport. But where?

(Photo/James R. Morgan)
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Posted in Downtown, Looking back, Photo Challenge
Tagged Fairfield Furniture, National Hall, Ross Perot

Saugatuck River and National Hall, from the Westport Library (Photo/Patricia McMahon)
Posted in Downtown, Pic of the Day
Today’s Friday Flashback is a 3-fer.

(Photo/Clayton Liotta via Facebook)
This circa-1976 image reminds us of when:
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Posted in Downtown, Friday Flashback, Weather

Saugatuck River in downtown fog (Photo/Amy Schneider)
Posted in Downtown, Pic of the Day, Weather
Tagged National Hall, Ruth Steinkraus Cohen Bridge, Saugatuck River
Downtown Westport is compact: Main Street and the Post Road, plus the Saugatuck River.
But there’s a lot to see. And there’s no one who captures it better than Lynn Untermeyer Miller.
The Westport native and 1971 Staples High School graduate sees it all: the natural beauty. The shops and shoppers. And the hidden sights the rest of us walk right past.
Here’s what Lynn sees:

Imperial Avenue footbridge

Riverwalk, east side of the Levitt Pavilion

Riverwalk, behind the Levitt

West bank of the Saugatuck River

Riverwalk lights, near the Library

Westport Library

Arezzo restaurant and National Hall

Pedestrian walkway and Gorham Island, off Parker Harding Plaza

Village Square

View from Anthropologie

Alley between Post Road and Church Lane

WEST boutique

Taylor Place

Cold Fusion

Brandy Melville

A relic from the Y’s downtown days. (All photos/Lynn Untermeyer Miller)
Downtown Westport in the fog — captured by Lynn Untermeyer Miller.

National Hall

Giegerich building

Library Riverwalk (All photos/Lynn Untermeyer Miller)
Posted in Downtown, Pic of the Day, Weather
Tagged Giegerich Building, National Hall, Westport Library Riverwalk