View My Rented Properties

View My Rented Properties

Open House in New Fairfield CT
This custom built contemporary was designed and built for the original owner that resides here today. Lovingly cared for and maintained over the last twenty years. The open floor plan design of this home was way before its time and is the preferred design today.
The main floor boasts a large entry foyer, living/family room, office/den or and additional sitting room, corian counter kitchen with light, bright eat-in area, formal dinning room. Additionally a powder room, oversize deck with hot tub and a three season heated and air pool complex and level private year yard.
The second floor features a master suite and bath with whirlpool tub and private deck leading to the outdoors. Additionally you will find two bedrooms that share a hall bath. The lower level is completely finished with its own full bath and walks out to the rear of the property.
The two car garage is attached and walks in on the main level. Additional storage space can be found in the unfinished area.

Click on any picture for more details about the property
Date:October 4, 2009
Time: 1 pm - 3 pm
Address: 54 Shortwoods Road, New Fairfield CT 06812
| NEW FAIRFIELD CT: A Lakeside Town |
| New Fairfield Center, at the intersection of Routes 37 and 39, is the heart of this well-known residential community. Convenient retail businesses and professional services are centrally located and close to its town hall, library, and post office. Both the New Fairfield Jaycees and the New Fairfield Historical Society have made great contributions to this idyllic and historic area. In 1724, a dozen citizens of Fairfield met with Squantz, Chief of the Schaghticoke Indians, and agreed on terms of purchase for this 32,000-acre tract for the equivalent of $300.00. Originally two miles wider, the territory had been narrowed by cession from Connecticut to New York in a boundary accord of 1683. Due to its great length, the Town was divided roughly in half in 1802 when the northern portion separated to form the Town of Sherman. In 1926 the Connecticut Light and Power Company approved a plan to create a lake and use its water to produce electricity. It took only 26 months to return the valley into Candlewood Lake. The lake's beauty and charm have drawn vacationers to new Fairfield ever since. |


Data Collectors to inspect homes soon for town's revaluation
During the next several months, data collectors from Vision Appraisal will be conducting inspections of properties in New Milford as part of the town's work for the 2010 revaluation of all real estate, as mandated by state statutes.
Data collectors will ask permission to inspect, the interior of your home and any other buildings on your property.
Photographs of properties will also be take. To ensure a home is inspected, a homeowner must sign a data collection form to verify the inspection. All data collectors will carry official photo identification and letter of introduction.
Data collectors generally work Monday though Fridays between 8 a.m. and 7 p.m., with some additional weekend hours.
Auto description and license plates will be filed with the local police department.
Call 860-355-3133 to verify this information.
Special Events
Maybe you did not know about Danbury
Connecticut's Favorite Milk Run 
You are a lean, mean cruising machine - a biker of stature among your peers. When you and your crew get ready to go on a run on a sunny Sunday afternoon, where are you going to go?
Well, if you are like a lot of other New England bikers, you want to aim your headlight towards some smooth, curvy scenic roads, that ultimately take you to a place where refreshments are cold and the crowds are motorcycle types like huge ice cream sundae, a cold shake, or some chocolate milk really hits the spot after a long, hard day of carving up the road with the thunder of your mighty steed. Right?
In the case of Marcus Dairy Bar Restaurant in Danbury, absolutely. What started as just a simple Sunday ride by a few guys from New Canaan has become the most popular weekend motorcycle hangout in New England. But how the heck did a milk for nearly a century grow into a two-wheeler mecca?
"It actually started in the late '60's, explains Marcus Dairy's Sean Marcus. "Guys started riding here because the roads to the dairy were great, and the restaurant had big glass windows out front so that wile they got a bite to eat, they could make sure nobody would mess with their bikes."
Now on Sunday (when the weather is decent) the dairy's parking lot is filled with hundreds of motorcycles from all over New England. Three times a year, vendors are brought in, bike shows are held, and upwards of 10,000 motorcyclists visit on these "Super Sundays" which bring so many machines into Danbury that the bikes spill over into the Danbury Fair Mall parking lot. Awesome.
The Hardware Store as Historical Treasure
Ah, the neighborhood hardware store. It's not just a vanishing fixture of small town America, or just a place to find that elusive solid-copper toilet valve you have been searching for like it was some sort of plumbers' Ark of the Covenant. No. if you are lucky (or just live in Danbury) your hardware store is a registered National Historical Place.
Meeker's Hardware at 86 White Street is such a store; in fact, it's the only hardware store in the country that is certified as a historical treasure. This is largely because it has been in its present location since 1889, and the family (through five generations now) has been taking care of the feed, hardware, and tool needs of the working community for more than a hundred years.
The monument in the front of the store is a part of the building's heritage, for it used to be found on the fourth store facade of the building as it stood until 1896. A fire that year destroyed the top two stories, and the stone was buried in the rubble and wasn't discovered until an excavation of the basement in 1976. The original two stories remain to this day, and despite the aura of historical holiness Meeker's is still a down-home place where you can score that evasive nut or bolt.
"My husband's grandfather built this store in 1883" explains Lucille Meeker, "and it was feed and grain mostly. We still sell hay and birdseed, but when the farms left we evolved almost completely into hardware. We still sell wood stoves, honey, whatever people need, like a general store. You can still buy nails and things by the pound here, too. You go into a modern hardware store and you have to buy them by the package."
Strangers at the Station
At first glance, the Danbury Railway Museum looks like an appealing little facility that chronicles the history of rail travel in this charming Connecticut city. That's exactly what it is, too.
But there's something a little weird about the place. In fact, you might get a creepy feeling that you've somehow seen it before. Lest you think this is a genuine case of deja vu, you should know that your strange feeling of unspecified remembrance is cinematically derived (especially if you are a Hitchcock fan).
Today the historic Danbury Station at 120 White Street may be the location of the Railway Museum, but fifty years ago it was a key location for one of Hitchcock's most memorable films, Strangers on a Train.
The year was 1950, and Hitchcock renamed the station Metcalf for the film, which starred Farley Granger and Robert Walker. The train station was critical to the story, as Granger and Walker meet on a train and this chance encounter results in murder with a very original version of blackmail thrown in. Toward the end of the movie, an important scene featuring Walker trying tho fish Hitchcock's Maguffin (in this case a cigarette lighter) out of a storm drain was also shot right in front at the station. Hitchcock also carefully chose the garbage placed in the drain for the shot.
The museum has a display with some great production photos from the film in addition to some great exhibits of railroad memorabilia, including a huge selection of lanterns. A tour of some classic railroad cars is available as well.
Danbury in Connecticut
Danbury's Official Town Information and Demographics

Nestled in northern Fairfield County and at the foot of the Berkshire Mountains, Danbury lies next to the New York State border and is often referred to as the "Gateway to New England." The hub of the Housatonic Valley Region and its close proximity to metropolitan centers, natural surroundings, many lakes and ponds, excellent school systems, cultural opportunities, health care facilities, low crime rate, quality of life, and real estate values make this a wonderful place to call home.
It's been said that Danbury began when eight families came from the Norwalk and Stamford CT areas in 1685. They came to settle in Danbury which the Indians then called "Pahquioque" or "Paquiaqe" meaning open plain or cleared land. Though the settlers had chosen the name "Swampfield" the general court in October 1687 decreed the name "Danbury" which came from the English word Danebury.
Danbury was known as the Hat City of the world and it is said that the first hat made in U.S. was made in Danbury. Danbury shops led the country in fur hat production and were exporting 20,000 hats annually. All the hats were hand made in small shops. Between 1808 & 1809, there were 56 hat shops in operation selling hats.
In 1849 a machine was introduced, which could form fur hat bodies, nearly eliminating all the small shops which gave away to larger factories increasing production levels to cover 5,000,000.
Danbury is rich in history and while it has become a modern thriving city, it takes great pride in remembering the past. The Danbury Fair was the state's larges fair running from 1869 - ending October 12, 1981. In the late 50's, the stock car races at the Race Arena attracted up to 10,000 fans weekly and lasted till the summer of 1981 as with the Danbury Fair. In order to remember how the "Great Danbury Fair" helped put Danbury on the map, the Danbury Fair Mall was constructed on the grounds that the fair was once held on. The mall opened in the mid-80's with Wayne Newton on hand to celebrate its opening. It boasted 250 stores and was the largest mall in Connecticut at the time.
Today, it hosts numerous special events including antique, home, boat, car, college fairs, and bridal shows.
History lives on in Danbury High School, Home of the Hatters, which is one of the state's largest high schools and proudly displays the Danbury Mad Hatter as its mascot. Danbury High School offers one of the newest and finest multi-purpose stadium complex in the area. The school newspaper is The Hatter's Herald and the school cafe is Hatter's Cafe.
The Charles Ives Center for the Arts. Inc. is a private, non-profit organization founded in 1974 and incorporated in 1976 to honor the memory of Danbury native Charles Edward Ives, who is one of America's greatest music composers.
The Ives Center produces the highest quality music and other arts-related programming at Ives Concert Park, a unique outdoor amphitheater situated on a beautiful area of state-owned land which includes 40 wooded acres, a pond, breathtaking gardens and public hiking trails.
Danbury's long tradition as a cultural and education center makes it a desirable place to live and raise a family. It continues to attract new residents with the quality of life it offers through its natural attributes of the Housatonic Valley, location, museums, performing arts, and shopping.
Parks
* Danbury Candlewood Park overlooks Candlewood Lake. Swimming, picnicking, and a boat launch are available in the 11.1 acre (45,000 m2) park.
* Hatters Community Park - 32 acres with a bowling alley, recreation building, picnic pavilion, 3 softball fields (field permit required from Parks & Recreation Dept), pond, banquet hall, and playground.
* Kenosia Park - 25 acre park with 100 yards of beach front, benches, playground, 3 soccer fields, non-motorized boating, and tables.
* Richter Park - Connecticuts Hidden Jewel. Situated in the heart of Fairfield County, Richter Park Golf Course encompasses over 180 acres of gentle rolling terrain.
* Rogers Park - is a baseball field in Danbury, Connecticut, at the end of Main Street and South Street.[1] The field is home to the Danbury Westerners of the New England Collegiate Baseball League
Helpful Links
Content © 2009 'Frequent Contributors'. Design © 2009 ActiveRain Corp.
Logos and service marks owned by copyright holder.