April 18, 2024

Gables gets B&B

The stone house is approved for a B&B.

Pennsbury Township Board of Supervisors gave unanimous approval to the Gables Restaurant for a bed and breakfast operation in two buildings on its adjacent property. The restaurant will also be changing its name in time.

Approval came after Wednesday night after two sessions of a conditional use hearing. Township solicitor Tom Oeste read a list of 29 conditions that Gables’ owners Ann Kolenik and Alfredo Giannaccari agreed to abide by.

Conditions include having a full-time operator with an operator’s apartment, no more than three employees, no cooking in the guest rooms, and a 14-day stay maximum guest stay.

Other conditions require food service to be limited to breakfast and afternoon tea for guests only, and that no catering shall be done from the stone building. No alcoholic beverages can be served in the B&B, but guests may bring their own.

The applicants had no problems with those conditions and most of the others, but there is one that Kolenik and Giannaccari grudgingly accept, that’s the limitation on the number of guest rooms in the two buildings, the stone building — the former location of Brandywine View Antiques — and the carriage house. The applicants wanted 16 rooms, eight in each building, but the board granted approval for a total of 12 rooms, eight in the stone building but only four in the carriage house.

In explaining the conditions before the board voted. township solicitor Tom Oeste said the 12 rooms were the “maximum permitted but not guaranteed. It depends on whether the remaining conditions can be complied with.”

During the discussion before the vote, there was a brief exchange with the applicants asking the reason for limiting the number of rooms, and Oeste said that was based on the ordinance and that 12 was the maximum the board could allow. He added that if they rejected that condition, the board was prepared to vote against the application.

At one point, Kolenik and attorney Lee Stivale excused themselves for a private discussion on the matter. When they returned, the 12-room maximum was accepted.

Another condition is restoring and maintaining the exteriors of both buildings “in substantial historic accuracy.” Part of that restoration with an eye on history is the future renaming of the restaurant. The Gables was once a creamery and had an exterior mural of a cow. Kolenik said they’ll be changing the name of the restaurant to the Black Cow Bistro.

About Rich Schwartzman

Rich Schwartzman has been reporting on events in the greater Chadds Ford area since September 2001 when he became the founding editor of The Chadds Ford Post. In April 2009 he became managing editor of ChaddsFordLive. He is also an award-winning photographer.

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Around Town April 18

Steve and Jackie Sonsini are in the final stages of preparing the new Chadds Ford Coffee House. It's schedule to open on April 24.

The Chadds Ford Coffee House is about to open in the location of the former First Keystone Bank/Bryn Mawr Trust in the little strip center with the U.S. Post Office. The shop is scheduled to open on Wednesday, April 24. Plans call for the shop to be open seven days per week, from 6:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Monday through Friday, 7:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. on Saturdays, and 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Sundays. There’s seating for 34.

On Wednesday, April 24, from 10 a.m. to noon, and from 5 – 8 p.m., the Kennett Library and Arts Holding Hands and Hearts (AHHAH) will co-host a Spring Forward Together event geared towards families with children to celebrate the Chester County Imagination Library. Children from birth to age five who live in Chester County are eligible to be enrolled in the Chester County Imagination Library program to receive a free book in the mail once a month. AHHAH has registered over 7,800 children in just one year and mailed over 81,000 books through the Chester County Imagination Library.

Lincoln and The Lincoln Building in West Chester.

Saturday, April 27, from 8 am. to noon is the spring Roadside Cleanup in Chadds Ford Township. Volunteers should meet at the township building at 8 a.m.

The Westtown Historical Commission is sponsoring a lecture, Abraham Lincoln and his West Chester Connection at 10 a.m. on Saturday, April 27, at the Westtown Township building, 1039 Wilmington Pike. The talk will be given by local historian Malcolm Johnstone. This talk will highlight Lincoln’s connection to West Chester, and many other little-known stories about our area’s history.

Delaware County Symphony presents a Tales from Europe symphony concert on Sunday, May 5, at 3 p.m. This final symphony concert of the season features the winner of the Youth Concerto Competition, Kai Freeman, performing Mendelssohn’s Concerto for Violin in E minor. Also included in the concert are the Prelude to Humperdinck’s Hansel and Gretel and Aus Italian by Richard Strauss. Go here for tickets.

Kids create at Mt. Cuba Center.

Mt. Cuba Center is holding a Kids Create event on Saturday, May 18 from 12:30 to 2 p.m. It’s billed as an afternoon of nature, artmaking, and fun. Mt. Cuba partners with award-winning folk artist, Eunice LaFate, to lead a unique children’s art program in the gardens. Kids will create a mural from natural materials and go home with their own paintings. This program is intended for ages 4 to 12. Art supplies are provided. Included with garden admission, advance registration is required. Go here to register.

Tickets are now on sale for the Kennett Rotary’s Kennett on Top, a party on the rooftop of the borough’s parking garage. The event is Saturday, June 22, from 6-9 p.m., rain or shine. It’s a night of scrumptious foods, wine and beer, a signature cocktail, and dancing with a live band while enjoying the ambiance of the vibrant downtown Kennett. Early bird tickets are $85 per person through April 30, and $100 per person afterward. The ticket price includes parking, food, beverages, the live band, the ambiance of the rooftop, and having a ton of fun. Tickets are available here.

Friends of Hank’s Place sign the beam that will be put into place atop the restaurant. Beam signing is a tradition celebrating the final beam of the construction process being put into place. The restaurant should reopen sometime around Labor Day, according to owner Anthony Young.

 

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