Landscaping Business Moving To Milford

The Zoning last night granted permission for a local landscaper to set up shop at Sabatinelli’s old contractor’ on Dilla Street, but criticized plans for a new sign at Quarry Square.

Despite one member’s objections, the supported a plan by of Landscape Depot to replace the scrap metal and junky now on site with , mulch, and decorative stone.

Before the board granted a special permit, Michael P. Visconti objected, worrying the business opening would be “two backwards for ” on the .

“It’s dangerous and slow enough as it is,” he said.

Meanwhile, other members and , who was on hand, saw the business plan as something positive.

“This is our chance to clean up another eyesore in the town of Milford,” DeLuca said.

Attorney Joseph said Mullen will sign a lease and clean up the land, which has contaminated spots and junk left around from its former industrial use.

The business will appeal mostly to local landscaping companies who can drive in and truck away materials, but also to residents, who would likely hire contractors to move the goods or , said.

In a letter of support, Larry Dunkin wrote the proposed use of the property at 57<+>1<+>/<->2<-> Dilla St. “will be an improvement to the property and to the neighborhood.”

According to Mullen’s plan, as explained it, the Depot in Upton will pick up and re-route here in Milford.

“This is sort of a no-brainer in terms of improving,” said . “It makes sense to do it.”

Depot also has shops in and Framingham.

In terms of here, “the traffic that will be generated can exit easily onto Dilla Street,” according to the applicant’s petition for variance.

“The sight lines for entering and exiting the premises are sufficient to allow for safe and easy access.”

In other business last night, the board criticized plans for a larger, internally illuminated directional sign for Quarry Square at the intersection of Quarry Drive and Fortune Boulevard.

Members objected to plans for the 8-foot-wide by 30-foot-high sign to be placed in an island, concerned it would block the sight line for tractor-trailer truck drivers who frequently stop there to come and go.

“All of a sudden, there’s an accident,” Mann said. “Right now, it’s a nightmare - I think if anything it’ll make it worse.”

Said member David Pyne: “I think it’s a terrible idea for a location like this; it’s horrible.”

He noted it “definitely makes it more unsafe” there, and suggested the sign be moved from the island to one side of the road.

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Monday, June 16th, 2008

One man goes headtohead over wind farm

AUTHOR Jack London once observed it was a lot cheaper to buy a general than to fight him and his army.

How Wel Networks must wish it had taken a similar approach with Sean Cox, a former wind farm designer who just happens to live a few kilometres upwind of its projected Te Uku wind farm.

Cox may have thrust a major spoke in the turbines of Wel’s $140 million plans with a wide-ranging and compelling submission in opposition to the project.

The sail design consultant, who lives at Aotea Harbour, has effectively forced a two-month adjournment of a Resource Management Act hearing into the project to allow Wel to prepare a time-consuming and costly response to his evidence.

Ironically Cox began his engaging two-hour submission at the hearing by observing Wel Networks “could have hired me as a consultant for nominal dollars and shut me up straight away”.

But, he mused, the community-owned company preferred to ignore him, and his offer to share 10 years of wind data he had collected on the district.

Contact Energy, which is preparing its own application for a far bigger wind farm to the north, is certainly not making the same mistake.

Cox told the hearing he has been hired by Contact to consult on its massive $2 billion project for the Te Akau-Waikaretu district.

Cox designed some of the world’s first wind farms back in the early 1970s, and at the hearing was quick to present himself as every RMA applicant’s nightmare an affected resident who is more technical than the technical experts.

With the zeal of a mad scientist, Cox set about rubbishing almost everything to do with the wind farm, but, in particular Wel’s evidence related to noise and subsonics (sounds that cannot consciously be heard).

It was the sort of stuff that only someone who has designed turbine blades for 30 years could truly appreciate.

Cox presented a string of complex calculations even more complicated than rugby’s tackled-ball rule or the blue lines in ice hockey to conclude that not only was the Wel case full of “fluff” but the bottom line was that there would be no public benefit from such a marginal proposition.

“Wel refused to let me see their data and showed no interest in seeing mine,” he said.

“I was dumbfounded.”

The Irish-born Cox made an immediate impact when he asked the presiding commissioners to declare their own technical backgrounds so he could pitch his presentation at a suitable level. When he found he was dealing with landscapers, town planners and barristers, he duly dumbed down his technical message.

While some of his scientific equations looked like they could have served as props for the movie A Beautiful Mind, other parts of his submission were brutally blunt.

He noted Wel Networks noise expert Nevil Hegley was an acoustics engineer, with a background in audible sound waves (those above 15hz) rather than subsonics, and argued his evidence should be set aside.

“Once the wavelength goes much over 20m the characteristics of air pressure waves change significantly,” he said.

“Much of the art in acoustics is to do with air-ear-brain interface as it is a subjective science.

“Subsonics is to do with the study of the properties of the air, the wave, the mechanics of it and its interaction with environmental objects, including humans.

“This is the proper province of the aerodynamicist, such as myself.”

From this platform of presumed technical superiority Cox attacked Hegley’s submission that noise levels should be measured only at house sites.

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Thursday, December 27th, 2007