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Town working on master plan for Freemans
Bridge Road area
Glenville. A colorful map jam-packed with information
on potential new roads, trails, and different land uses is
the first publicly disclosed installment of an ambitious town
plan to control development in the Freemans Bridge Road area.
Town officials say there is development pressure on the 650
to 700 acres of and bordered by Wal-Mart to the north, Sunnyside
Road to the south, Maple Avenue to the east and Saratoga Road
to the west because of the big box store.

Synthesis worked with the Town to develop a viable plan that
balances economic development with residents' concerns, suggesting
specific areas to be developed for mixed use, as well as areas
targeted for particular types of development.
Historically, where Wal-Mart has gone, other retailers have
followed. Anticipating that, Glenville officials decided to
create a separate master plan to guide future development
of the area.
“We needed structured development on the Freemans Bridge
[Road],” said town Supervisor Clarence Mosher. A key
element of the plan is the 200 acres owned by the Piotrowski
family, which the town plans to develop into an office-technology
park if the family turns over the land. So far there have
been only discussions on the land transfer but no agreement.
The town was awarded a $75,000 Build Now New York grant from
the state and a matching grant from the county Industrial
Development Agency, and Mosher recently learned the town has
only three more months to decide how to use the money or it
will lose it. However, he said the state will allow the money
to be transferred to another project – such as the Scotia-Glenville
Industrial Park.
The grant money would allow the town to make the land “shovel-ready”
for businesses, which is important because the town wants
to take advantage of the high-tech boom expected to hit the
region because of International Sematech’s research
center in Albany. “We can get Sematech-allied industry
to come here. There is no better place,” Mosher said.
Besides the new tech park, the master plan includes several
new roads, including a new “spine” from Maple
Avenue, across Freemans Bridge Road and down to Sunnyside
Road. The plan also calls for more pedestrian and bike trails
along the Mohawk River and up into the northern part of the
town, while preserving several parcels of open space, wetlands
and flood plain.
There are also areas where the plan suggests multifamily
housing and office space – also included on part of
the Piotrowski parcel. The appearance of Freemans Bridge Road
would also begin to change if the plan is implemented. Town
planner Kevin Corcoran called the new design a “neo-traditional”
pattern, giving the corridor a more urban look and feel. Buildings
would be moved closer to the road, there would be sidewalks,
common open space, parking in rear lots and streetscaping.
But it’s not going to happen overnight, he said. “That
will take time, certainly,” he said.
The state Department of Transportation is also playing a
big part because of its plans to reconstruct Freemans Bridge
Road – expanding it to four lanes from its intersection
with Maple Avenue north to Route 50 – over the next
five to 10 years.
Right now the plan is only in map form and there is no written
document ready for public review other than a few reports
and charts. “It’s a concept and it doesn’t
specify in detail how land will be used,” said Mosher.
“There will be [a] physical plan and it will be accepted
by the town board [in November].”
“We know the plan is ambitious,” said Corcoran,
adding it will take years to fulfill. “We also know
we can’t meet everyone’s demands.”
The master plan will be a guide for development, but it does
not carry the force of law. The town will have to change or
amend its zoning regulations to implement the design controls.
There is a moratorium on building that is expected to be
lifted after the town board vote, but it will take time to
change the zoning, leaving the town vulnerable to development
that doesn’t fit in with the master plan. Corcoran said
the planning board had recommended keeping the moratorium
until the zoning was changed, but politically it would be
difficult. Part of the moratorium has already been lifted,
allowing developers to submit plans and make applications
for development in the area.
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