Hartford Business Journal

HBJ070824UF

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HARTFORDBUSINESS.COM | JULY 8, 2024 9 DEAL WATCH | BUYERS & SELLERS The company that builds and installs the critical systems in virtually every type of facility is the same company you can rely on to maintain them. For over over 50 years, our clients have trusted us to deliver end-to-end facilities solutions, so they can focus on their core business. We design, install, and maintain systems in: Industrial, Manufacturing, Commercial, Higher Education, Healthcare, and Pharmaceutical facilities. WE FOCUS ON YOUR FACILITIES— SO YOU CAN FOCUS ON YOUR BUSINESS. 860.871.1111 Toll Free: 800.741.6367 nemsi.com MECHANICAL | ELECTRICAL | PLUMBING | SHEET METAL | BUILDING AUTOMATION | FACILITIES SERVICES License #'s: E1-0125666 S1-302974 P1-203519 F1-10498 SM1-192 MC-1134 Yale plans new parking garage, engineering building Y ale University is looking to build a new parking garage in the upper Science Hill section of its campus as part of a broader development plan that will include a new physical sciences and engineering building. School officials submitted a site plan application for work on a 36-acre block within Prospect, Edwards and Sachem streets and Whitney Avenue, which includes building a new 406-space parking garage. The garage will replace the existing Pierson-Sage Garage, which will be demolished. The site plan also involves the installation of additional portions of a geothermal system. The city has already approved several related Yale projects, including the construction of a new chemical safety building and an addition to the Wright Laboratory. Yale officials said they will submit an application later this summer for an additional project — construc- tion of a new physical sciences and engineering building. This sketch shows various expansion projects planned for the upper Science Hill section of Yale University's New Haven campus. EAST HARTFORD Pratt & Whitney wants to increase the size of a new planned office building on its East Hartford campus by nearly 50%, with the addition of two stories, including outdoor ameni- ties for employees and green space. The jet-engine maker originally received town approval to build a new five-story, 313,00-square-foot building in East Hartford. A revised plan submitted to town planning and zoning officials calls for a 465,000-square-foot building with seven stories. The seventh story would include outdoor amenity areas for employees, including a patio and vegetated "green roof." Under the proposal, an existing 249,847-square-foot office building, which houses design and engineering staff, would be demolished to make way for the new building and an adjacent employee parking lot. The new building would be located on a 17.75-acre portion of the campus, near Runway Road, which runs along the eastern outskirts of the property. A spokesman for Pratt & Whitney's parent company, RTX, said the zoning application does not signal any commitment to build the new office, but is a required step as it reviews and considers real estate options. WETHERSFIELD A local real estate broker and devel- oper has plans to convert a historic building in Old Wethersfield into a brewery, restaurant and events space. The Masonic Temple building at 245 Main St., in Wethersfield, sold on June 21 for $400,000 to 245 Old Wethersfield LLC, which is controlled by principal Nicholas Roman, according to town land records. Broker and developer Michael Guidicelli said he represented the buyer in the deal and will lead the redevelopment. Guidicelli said all permits for a brewery and events space were secured by the previous owners and a prospective tenant, Boon- doggle Brewing, before those plans fell through. The three-story building has 2,800 square feet per floor, and he envisions all or most of it being occupied by a brewery with events space. However, the property could accommodate two separate tenants, Guidicelli said. He envisions limited-capacity brewing on-site, perhaps for an existing brewing company that is looking to expand into the Wethersfield area. "I want a successful brand," said Guidicelli, who added that he is already fielding calls from prospective tenants.

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