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General News: New Health Club Approved for Cornwall Plaza

The new health club will be located at the site of the old CVS store.
The new health club will be located at the site of the old CVS store.
May 04, 2011

The Anytime Fitness health club won approval on Monday from the town of Cornwall Planning Board to operate at the site of the former CVS store in Cornwall Plaza. The board voted unanimously to allow a special use permit to operate a health club at the site after a discussion of safety and parking issues.

Gary Klein, who applied for the permit, told the planning board that outside normal staffing hours of 8 am to 8 pm members of the health club will be required to wear a safety necklace with panic buttons that will alert emergency services. There will also be 16 security cameras and panic buttons throughout the gym.

Achilles Rossi, who owns a residence across from the plaza was the only person who spoke at a public hearing before the vote. He said he was concerned about what could happen if someone had a heart attack inside and about the need for greater police surveillance to prevent the parking lot from becoming an after-hours hangout. Klein told the board that he has never experienced any security or medical problems in the four Anytime Fitness clubs he already operates in Florida.

Planning board members also discussed parking at the plaza. Consultant Leslie Dotson said that she had counted 40 spaces near the building and another 20 or so nearby. While Klein said that as many as 80 people could be at the gym during peak evening hours, he noted that many of them ride with other people, reducing the parking demand.

Danny Maniscalchi, who operates Leo’s Pizza’s a few doors down from the future health club, says he welcomes the new facility and thinks that it will bring more business to his restaurant. He also noted that he would like to start working out there as well.

Klein told the board that the gym should be operational about three months after he signs a lease for the building.

Anytime Fitness operates more than one thousand health clubs nationwide, six in New York State, where another six are in the planning stages.



Comments:

This is great news. I am going to sign my wife up as soon as your doors open.


posted by j h on 05/04/11 at 11:43 AM

Sounds fine on a few levels, but is anyone thinking about how we're happily (or desperately) opening up our business community to franchises? The horse is probably already out of the barn, but it will be interesting to see how this will affect whatever it is we perceive as a 'small town feeling'. Can MacDonald's or Burger King be far behind?


posted by Rick Gioia on 05/05/11 at 12:05 AM

With all due respect, I would much prefer a clean well kept franchise to derelict empty storefronts. We should be thankful for any business willing to add to our community. It's perceived desolation that gives people the sense of dread about worse things to come. A vibrant commercial/retail atmosphere is in everybody's best interest. Small town feel shouldn't be confused with ghost town feel.


posted by J Klein on 05/05/11 at 10:15 AM

Rick- May I respectfully point out that we have had CVS, Dunkin Donuts and Subway for at least several years to over a decade now.You concern is a bit too late- NO? Diane


posted by Diane Parodi on 05/05/11 at 11:14 AM

...because, god forbid the adolescents have any part of town where they can hang out without being chased off... As long as they are considerate of passers-by and they don't litter it shouldn't be a problem. I have, on a few occasions, asked kids to pick up their trash out of consideration for the business owners and the kids always complied. They live here, too.


posted by Kate Benson on 05/06/11 at 1:01 PM

What is it with this community and skateboards? What's wrong with skateboards? I assume it's some kind of perceived liability issue--"They could hit a crack on the sidewalk, fall and sue us"--but imagine if Cornwall said, "No bicycling! It's dangerous, and you bikers could conceivably sue us if you hurt yourselves on town property! And don't you leave your bike in front of my restaurant, it's an eyesore and somebody could trip over it!"

(Yes, I know, we're not supposed to bike on Town property...so why is there a bikestand in front of the Library? Does nobody rides a bike to the Little League fields? Everyone does ride where they reasonably wish, but bikers vote and spend lots of money. Kids don't.)

Bicycle riders, some of them on multi-thousand-dollar bikes and as privileged as that suggests, of course wouldn't stand for this for a minute. Nor would they ever spend a dime in a restaurant or shop that chased them away. Adults who seem to think that skateboards are the devil's spawn need to get over it.


posted by Stephan Wilkinson on 05/06/11 at 6:52 PM

Rick,
I took a day or so to think about a response to your post above. I would also like to see Cornwall look more like Cold Spring or Nyack. But over time we have seen that private enterprises are not so successful due to a variety of reasons, one as noted in a study completed by Glynwood Center demonstrated that Cornwall is not a pass through Main Street and it does not attract a high enough volume to have novelty stores. Having the blend of franchise retail will provide stability and much needed jobs, especially for our youth. What perplexes me is that we have not as a community been more vigilant and support the condemnation of deliquent buildings on Main Street. No first floor housing. on Main Street.


posted by j h on 05/08/11 at 11:46 PM

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