Future health center would relocate Winsted services

BARKHAMSTED — The proposal to build a new state-of-the-art medical center along Route 44 in Barkhamsted continues to move forward, with the plan clearing its first important hurdle by receiving the approval of Barkhamsted’s Inland Wetlands Commission.

The commission, which received an application for the project last October from Borghesi Building & Engineering Company, unanimously approved the application at its Feb. 2 meeting.

The Torrington-based developer is proposing to construct a one-story, 18,290-square-foot commercial health services building at 390 New Hartford Road, next door to Mallory Brook Plaza.

The proposed facility, if approved, is expected to become the new home of Charlotte Hungerford Hospital in the greater-Winsted area.

The plan includes a large parking area, emergency medical clinic, cardiac rehabilitation center and a helipad for emergency medical helicopter landings.

Wetlands, however, adjoin the rear of the 5-acre parcel and Mallory Brook runs through the southeastern portion of the plot. Because of this, the site plan required the review of the Inland Wetlands Commission.

Currently, Charlotte Hungerford operates an emergency medical clinic at the Winsted Health Center daily from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. The Torrington hospital is the health center’s largest tenant.

In addition to the emergency clinic, Charlotte Hungerford runs cardiac and pulmonary rehabilitation programs, as well as blood drawing, laboratory, x-ray and digital mammography services at the Spencer Street facility. The hospital’s four-bed Hungerford Regional Sleep Laboratory is also located there.

Last September, Charlotte Hungerford announced it was looking into the possibility of moving out of the Spencer Street facility.

Tim LeBouthillier, spokesperson for the hospital, told The Journal Tuesday that the project has yet to be presented to the hospital’s board of directors for their approval.

“CHH is continuing to conduct its feasibility and cost analysis study of the project at this time,� he wrote in an e-mail to The Journal.

Although the center site is located a few hundred feet over the town line, Winsted’s Water Pollution Control Authority is also involved in reviewing the project, as sewer lines would have to be extended to and from the facility, if it is built.

With Charlotte Hungerford seeking a new location for its medical services, Winsted Health Center officials are also looking forward to the future.

The Community Health and Wellness Center of Greater Torrington is working with the Winsted Health Center Foundation, the board of directors that oversees the 115 Spencer St. facility, to find a way to create a permanent home for the group there.

Currently, the community health center provides primary medical care and advocacy services to under- and uninsured individuals throughout Litchfield County at its 489 Migeon Ave. office in Torrington.

But one of the key component’s of the Torrington center’s strategic plan is opening a second satellite center in Winsted in 2010.

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