| Issue #33, November
10, 2006 |
WILL ZONING BOARDS BOARD UP THE BOARDY BARN
By T.J. Clemente
Although the reported sale
for the legendary bar-hangout “Boardy Barn” in Hampton
Bays is dead, there comes the realization that the Sunday hangout
for so many different generations over the past 40 years may actually
close soon if another buyer is not located. It is just another Hampton’s
icon shopped because the land it occupies is worth more than the
present business on it can earn. It is just another nail in the
coffin of what was once small town America.
In Boardy Barn’s case, a strip
mall was proposed to the planning board, whose members saw more
tax revenue and an end to the partying on the site that goes on
all summer “like a college homecoming every weekend.”
The investors withdrew from the purchase when it became obvious
that due to the zoning of the property as a “highway business”
more parking spaces had to be included in the plan then the investors
could put in and justify the cost.
A representative of Anthony Galgano,
the owner of Boardy Barn, declared the proposed deal “dead”
but said Mr. Galgano is ready to sell should the right offer again
come his way.
So that could mean the end of the
40-year summer party on the corner of Old Montauk Highway across
from the Hess Station. For years, the tradition was that first time
visitors got a mug of beer bath. The bartender at Shagwong in Montauk
tells stories of years past when she would go there and walk around
in mud made by beer and dirt. She met her first serious boyfriend
there, though “he wasn’t that serious.” Lee Bieler,
former owner of the now very dead Blue Parrot, called Boardy Barn,
“A wild place, very wild, so many people met so many people
there in that lot. It’s sad to see it go. God, it’s
been there forever.” The last event held at The Boardy Barn
this season was the All Hampton Bays All Class reunion held October
14th. It started at 7 p.m. and officially closed at 11 p.m. However,
rumor has it there are still six cars abandoned on the site because
the owners still are not sure where they parked. The big tent with
the teal stripes always let one know that a party was going to happen
on the grounds.
However, all this may come to a close
if the right price is met. Jeff V. Murphee, the planning and developing
administrator for Southampton Town, reportedly claims that surveys
done recently have the local residents saying the Boardy Barn property
should be redeveloped and linked to the neighboring Wild by Nature
shopping complex. Perhaps this group was not the most sentimental
to the parties held at the Boardy Barn. One former patron said it
best. “I met my wife there except at the time she was someone
else’s wife.”
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