The Day

Developer plans large-scale Montville data center

Two buildings, 87,000 and 166,000 square feet, will be built in area where homes sit empty

- By BENJAMIN KAIL Day Staff Writer

Montville — A developer eager to attract major tech firms plans to build a large-scale data center between Route 32 and the Thames River, a project officials say could jolt the town’s economy while overhaulin­g a dilapidate­d area where dozens of homes were left vacant more than a decade ago.

The Planning and Zoning Commission unveiled and unanimousl­y approved the site plan for the first phase of the project this week. Developer Verde Group LLC hopes to build two large data storage buildings — at 87,000 and 166,000 square feet, each with an office, electrical room and data hall with computer and networking equipment — on 65 acres, with room for potential expansion on a 300-acre site.

“This could be transforma­tional for the town of Montville,” said Mayor Ron McDaniel, who negotiated with the developer for years. “I met with these people in my dining room, in diners, in coffee shops to try to figure out how to get where we needed to be. The economy was morphing, so we had to make sure the best and highest use for this property.

“A storage hub so businesses don’t have to clog up their own hard drives is an exciting piece of technology. Montville is geographic­ally placed really well for this type of project. Big companies could come and store data. It’s very exciting.” WILLS PIKE, TOWN COUNCILOR AND FINANCE COMMITTEE CHAIRMAN

We’re halfway between Boston and New York, it’s prime property here. When you look at what’s going on in the economy right now, data centers are the future. With the amount of data people need between their phones, Internet and streaming TV, data is huge.”

McDaniel declined to discuss potential costs of the project or eventual property tax revenue to the town, noting officials and the developer were still “two or three pieces away from finishing the jigsaw puzzle,” including finalizing purchases of multiple properties and the clearing of several dilapidate­d homes and lots within the next several months.

The project’s approval also came a year after a previous owner of the site paid $1.3 million in back taxes owed since 2010. Previous owners and mortgage holders were plagued by bankruptci­es and lawsuits as plans stalled for hotels, golf courses, luxury condominiu­ms, upscale stores and a marina, leaving overgrown plots and empty houses ransacked and tarnished by graffiti and garbage left by squatters.

The current site owner, Mohegan Hill Montville LLC, whose principal is Verde Group LLC, agreed to demolish several of the vacant houses on Massapeag Side Road, Driscoll Drive and Derry Hill Road, before constructi­ng the data storage buildings, which could house multiple tenants.

“We’re in discussion­s with all the name brands,” Verde Group LLC President and CEO Thomas Quinn told the Planning and Zoning Commission on Tuesday. “The ancillary business opportunit­ies and housing opportunit­ies will make a huge difference in any area where you have these kinds of data centers.”

A message left with Quinn on Friday was not immediatel­y responded to, but he told town officials that his company wanted “to get started sooner rather than later. We’d like to make this 5G market that’s coming at us very quickly.”

Quinn also said the Montville data center would be “one of the ones to look to for clean and green,” noting the data storage buildings would house gas engine generators, as opposed to diesel, for backup power.

Town Councilor and Finance Committee Chairman Wills Pike said Friday that the project could put Montville on the map for technology firms as 5G wireless — the next mobile technology standard — hits the market next year.

“A storage hub so businesses don’t have to clog up their own hard drives is an exciting piece of technology,” Pike said. “Montville is geographic­ally placed really well for this type of project. Big companies could come and store data. It’s very exciting.”

The owners are overcoming a lack of frontage along Route 32 — which Town Planner Marcia Vlaun described as a yearslong stumbling block for developmen­t at the site — by purchasing abutting privately owned parcels and land north of Saint Bernard School owned by the Norwich Roman Catholic Diocesan Corporatio­n.

Plans call for the extension of water, sewer, gas, electric and telecommun­ications lines, and will require a number of permits, including a state Department of Energy and Environmen­tal Protection stormwater quality permit. The project does not impact any regulated wetlands.

Quinn said the large buildings were “benign, boxy buildings with a few parking spaces in front,” with about eight to 10 employees and little traffic during normal operations.

Vlaun, who said the site plan met Planning and Zoning requiremen­ts, noted the buildings’ sizes and configurat­ions may depend on proprietar­y requiremen­ts of potential tenants.

The Planning and Zoning Commission’s approval was conditiona­l, and Verde Group LLC must meet more than two dozen conditions for the project to push forward, including providing sewer capacity and undergroun­d infiltrati­on details and completing demolition of at least 10 vacant houses within the next year.

Town Councilor Billy Caron applauded the project and sympathize­d with nearby homeowners “keeping up their lawns and keeping up their properties” while vacant homes within the site fell into disrepair over the years.

“Now this developer comes in and is already taking initiative to tear them down and be a good taxpayer for our town,” Caron said.

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