382 Route 2 | Preston, Connecticut
Resort Commercial Development Opportunity Along the Route 2 Growth Corridor
A developer-focused land opportunity with Route 2 visibility, Resort Commercial zoning, historic conceptual planning, traffic exposure, infrastructure upside, and multiple potential paths for hospitality, recreation, wellness, service retail, and experiential commercial uses.
A Route 2 Development Site Built Around Optionality, Visibility, and Long-Term Corridor Growth
382 Route 2 is being presented as a commercial development opportunity within Preston’s Resort Commercial district. The site offers a rare combination of corridor visibility, acreage, tourism adjacency, prior development vision, and multiple potential paths for destination-oriented commercial uses.
This is not being positioned as a shovel-ready institutional development site. Instead, it is best understood as a flexible development opportunity where the right buyer can evaluate zoning, traffic, topography, wetlands, infrastructure, phasing, and long-term upside.
The strongest buyer will likely be one who understands how to balance near-term feasibility with future infrastructure and corridor growth potential.
Property at a Glance
Acreage, buildable area, traffic counts, and utility proximity are based on available materials and are subject to buyer verification.
Preston Is No Longer an Isolated Land Story. It Is Part of a Larger Regional Growth Corridor.
For a developer, the question is not simply what can be built on the property today. The larger question is what regional momentum may support demand over time.
Electric Boat Expansion
Electric Boat’s continued hiring and regional expansion are reshaping demand across Southeastern Connecticut, with impacts on housing, services, hospitality, retail, and workforce-supporting commercial uses.
Preston Riverwalk
Preston Riverwalk is a major redevelopment effort involving hundreds of acres and a long-term vision for mixed-use, entertainment, hospitality, recreation, and destination-oriented development.
Foxwoods & Tourism Traffic
The property’s proximity to Foxwoods Resort Casino places it within a regional tourism and entertainment corridor, supporting potential hospitality, recreation, food service, and experience-driven commercial concepts.
These regional drivers do not guarantee approvals, development feasibility, or demand for any specific use. They provide context for why qualified developers may want to evaluate the Route 2 corridor more closely.
Core Site Factors a Developer Will Want to Underwrite
The opportunity is best evaluated through a combination of zoning, traffic exposure, buildable area, infrastructure feasibility, wetland constraints, site design, and phased development strategy.
Zoning
The primary development framework is Preston Resort Commercial, intended for tourism-oriented commercial development along Route 2.
Traffic
Prior materials reference nearby Route 2 traffic counts of approximately 26,596 ADT, 26,000 ADT, and 18,100 ADT at nearby points.
Infrastructure
Near-term underwriting should assume well and septic unless a buyer can verify and justify a public water extension.
Buildable Area
Prior materials estimate approximately 13.59 buildable acres after accounting for wetlands, regulated area, and setback areas.
Route 2 Visibility Supports Commercial, Service, Hospitality, and Destination-Oriented Uses
The prior traffic count report for 382 Route 2 identified nearby traffic counts along Norwich-Westerly Road / Route 2, including counts of approximately 26,596 ADT, 26,000 ADT, and 18,100 ADT at referenced nearby points.
For developers, these counts matter because visibility and traffic exposure help support uses such as hospitality, restaurants, convenience/service retail, recreation, wellness, and other commercial concepts tied to corridor movement.
Any final access design, curb cut, traffic review, sightline analysis, and DOT or municipal coordination should be independently verified by a buyer and its engineering team.
Traffic Count References
Approx. 26,596 ADT
Approx. 26,000 ADT
Approx. 18,100 ADT
Traffic data from prior property materials. Buyer to verify current counts and access requirements.
Commercial-First Zoning Designed for Tourism-Oriented Development Along Route 2
The primary value driver is the Preston Resort Commercial district. The district is intended to promote tourism-oriented commercial development along portions of State Route 2 and to incorporate engineering and planning techniques that promote traffic safety.
Potential Permitted Uses
- Hotels and motels
- Indoor recreation and cultural facilities
- Dine-in restaurants
- Commercial recreation and outdoor amusements
- Business services and professional offices
- Service stations and convenience stores
- Grocery, drug, apparel, and related retail uses
Potential Special Exception Uses
- Convention centers
- Stadiums and sports arenas
- Transportation-related facilities
- Specialty tourism retail
- Drive-through windows as accessory uses
- Vacation resort concepts
- Certain parking structures or larger buildings subject to review
Important Zoning Note
The property should be evaluated as a Resort Commercial development opportunity, not a straight multifamily or residential subdivision play. Residential concepts should be treated as secondary or conditional and subject to zoning interpretation, approvals, and infrastructure feasibility.
Setbacks, Coverage, Height, and the Preston/Ledyard Split Matter
The prior property packet and current zoning materials provide a starting framework for site planning. Buyers should verify all dimensional requirements with Preston, Ledyard, and their own engineering team.
Preston RC Dimensional Snapshot
Ledyard R-60 Dimensional Snapshot
Dimensional information is provided for discussion purposes only and should be confirmed directly with the applicable municipality before design, acquisition, or development decisions are made.
The Site Has Scale, But the Usable Development Envelope Must Be Carefully Underwritten
Prior materials identified wetlands, regulated areas, and building setback areas that materially influence the practical development envelope. While the overall site provides meaningful acreage, the prior packet estimated approximately 13.59 buildable acres after accounting for certain constraints.
This makes the property especially well-suited for buyers who can evaluate site planning creatively, phase development intelligently, and match the development program to infrastructure and environmental constraints.
Prior Packet Site Estimates
Public Water Proximity Creates Upside, But Not Certainty
Based on owner-provided mapping, public water appears to be approximately 0.7 miles from the property. That proximity is meaningful because it creates a more credible long-term infrastructure story than a remote land site.
However, public water is not currently at the site. Any extension would require engineering, approvals, utility coordination, capacity verification, and a cost-benefit analysis tied to a specific development program.
For near-term underwriting, many buyers will likely evaluate the site as a well and septic opportunity unless their project scale can justify pursuing infrastructure extension.
Key Utility Questions
- Where is the exact connection point?
- Who controls the water infrastructure?
- Is capacity available?
- What approvals would be required?
- What would the true extension cost be?
- Can the proposed project scale justify the investment?
- What sewage disposal approach will be required?
Phased Commercial or Experiential Development May Be the Most Practical Near-Term Path
The most realistic near-term approach may be a phased development strategy that begins with a smaller well/septic-supported commercial or experiential use, while preserving long-term upside tied to infrastructure extension and corridor growth.
Phase One Thinking
Restaurant, service retail, wellness, glamping, recreation, or other lower-infrastructure-intensity uses.
Expansion Potential
Additional buildings, pads, hospitality components, or larger commercial uses may be evaluated if infrastructure can be extended.
Long-Term Upside
The site’s long-term upside is tied to Route 2 corridor growth, infrastructure proximity, and buyer creativity.
Buyer Profile
Regional developers, commercial users, hospitality operators, outdoor recreation groups, wellness operators, or patient long-term investors.
Zoning, Topography, and Site Planning Context
The following materials provide a starting point for evaluating zoning, topography, and physical site characteristics. Buyers should independently verify all information.
Preston Zoning Map

Preston Topography

Ledyard Topography

Prior Conceptual Planning Demonstrated Large-Scale Commercial Interest
A prior conceptual plan explored a larger-scale commercial program at the site. This plan is not being presented as an approved development plan, but it provides helpful historical context and demonstrates that experienced development groups previously saw commercial potential along this corridor.

Historical conceptual plan shown for discussion and illustration only. It should not be interpreted as an approved site plan, current entitlement, or representation of final buildability.
Illustrative Concepts Designed to Help Buyers Think Creatively About the Site
The following concepts are illustrative only. They are not engineered plans, approved uses, or representations of final site capacity. They are intended to show the range of commercial, experiential, recreation, hospitality, wellness, and destination-oriented ideas a buyer may explore within the context of Resort Commercial zoning.
Glamping & Outdoor Hospitality
Outdoor hospitality may align with tourism traffic, natural site character, and lower infrastructure intensity compared with traditional large-scale commercial development.
Wellness Retreat
Wellness, retreat, spa, boutique lodging, and nature-focused concepts may offer a lower-density development path with destination appeal.
Equine & Recreation
The site may appeal to niche recreational or equestrian-oriented users seeking visibility, acreage, and a semi-rural setting.
Controlled Agriculture / Ag-Tech
Greenhouse, controlled agriculture, or specialized cultivation concepts may be evaluated depending on licensing, market conditions, utilities, and approvals.
Entertainment & Destination Recreation
Resort Commercial zoning creates a framework for destination-oriented uses, though larger entertainment concepts would require significant diligence and approvals.
Experiential Recreation
Experiential recreation concepts could be explored, subject to noise, traffic, environmental, operational, and community review.
Residential Conceptual Study
Residential ideas may be explored only within the limits of zoning, infrastructure, and approvals. The primary positioning remains commercial and Resort Commercial driven.
Review Available Site Materials
The available survey and site materials help buyers begin their review of boundary, topography, access, wetlands, and development considerations.
Survey

Survey Detail

Additional Survey Detail

A2 Survey

Corridor Frontage and Roadway Context
The property benefits from its position along Route 2, a major travel corridor connecting regional destinations, employment centers, and tourism traffic.
A Development Thesis, Not Just a Land Listing
382 Route 2 is being positioned for buyers who understand commercial zoning, corridor growth, infrastructure timing, and phased development strategy.
The opportunity is strongest for a buyer who can evaluate today’s feasibility while also recognizing the potential long-term upside of infrastructure proximity and regional growth.
Presented by Seaport Commercial
Qualified developers, investors, operators, and users are encouraged to contact our team to request the available due diligence package and discuss the opportunity in greater detail.
Request the Full 382 Route 2 Due Diligence Package
Qualified buyers may request available surveys, zoning information, conceptual studies, mapping, and supporting due diligence materials.
Our team can walk interested parties through the site, the zoning framework, the infrastructure considerations, and the development positioning.
Request Full PackageSeaport Commercial
Research • Valuation • Marketing • Advisory
All information is subject to buyer verification. Interested parties should conduct their own due diligence regarding zoning, site plans, wetlands, engineering, utilities, infrastructure, access, capacity, permitting, environmental matters, financing, operating assumptions, construction feasibility, and all development-related matters. Conceptual renderings and studies are illustrative only and do not represent approved plans, guaranteed uses, final buildability, cost, timing, financing, or governmental requirements.


