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Norwalk celebrates Lockwood Mathews Museum s newly upgraded historic look
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CTDOT s Walk Bridge Program Celebrates Completion of Historic Restoration Project in Norwalk – NorwalkPlus com
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Megan Johnson Globe correspondent May 11, 2021 9:38 am
When Dean Brown purchased The Bevin House, a French Second Empire-style mansion in East Hampton, Conn., the historic property had been abandoned for about five years. Now the stunning Victorian is an impeccably restored seven-bed, 4.5-bath home listed at $1,450,000.
“I bought it years ago from the bank and spent about a year and a half fixing it up,” said Brown. “Halfway through that, I decided to make it a bed and breakfast, because it’s a very historical house and there’s actually nowhere to stay around here.”
Philo Bevin, known as one of the owners of Bevin Brothers Manufacturing Co., built the home at 26 Barton Hill Road in 1872. The company, which still manufactures bells, contributed to East Hampton’s moniker as “Belltown,” but when Brown acquired Bevin House, it needed an overhaul; it wasn’t winterized, and only two of the 20 radiators in the house functioned. Now it features a state-of-t
Despite heavy rain, the streets are a hive of activity. Trucks deliver racks of raw meat, stacks of pink cakes and basmati rice, small clouds of starchy powder escaping as the sacks are piled up inside shops that sell coconut oil, curry powders and other Indian wares. I am in Little India, a pocket of Paris that saw an influx of South Indian and Sri Lankan Tamils move here in the 1980s following the outbreak of civil war.
I turn on to a quieter street scattered with Indian sweet shops. Suddenly, the buildings give way to rows of train tracks. Facing them stands a six-storey corner building that went by utterly unnoticed until very recently.