Awesome Toys and Gifts looks to live up to its new name in Westport

Westporters may have no particular problem with Stamford, but would they necessarily shop at a store called Stamford Toys and Books?

That was the situation facing Nick Tarzia when he decided to take the plunge and open a second toy store. Fortunately, his younger customers had the solution.

“Most kids, when they come into the store, yell out ”˜Awesome!”™ when they see what we have. They named it,” Tarzia laughed.

So it was that the 6,200-square-foot Awesome Toys and Gifts opened at 429 Post Road East in Westport on March 30, with the 5,000-square-foot Stamford store at 970 High Ridge Road also taking the new moniker.

“There”™d been a void in that area when it came to toy stores,” the Stamford resident said of Westport, “especially after the Toys ”˜R”™ Us closed in Norwalk. There”™d been a small toy store in Westport, but nothing of any significance for a while.”

Awesome in Westport includes a coffee bar and will feature a number of events ”“ Pokemon tournaments being particularly popular ”“ to make it more of a destination than a simple retail operation, Tarzia said, noting that a similar transition is taking place at the Stamford location.

“We really want it to be more of a community gathering place,” he said. “This way mom and dad can spend an hour, hour-and-a-half here relaxing or working on their laptops while the kids are exploring the toys. It”™s been done in bookstores for years, but not so much in toy stores.

“We want people to feel that it”™s their store,” he continued. “We”™re the stewards of it, and we plan to be very reactive to the customers”™ wants and needs. I believe this really is the next generation of retail.”

Tarzia recalled the days when he ran an office supply business.

“That was in 1988” at the Stamford address, he said. “Then the retail world started changing, and in 1991 it became a stationery store and a few years later, a toy business.” That atypical transition was spurred by a phone call from Wilton-based toy company Melissa & Doug asking him to sell its toys on a three-month trial.

“Toys weren”™t even on my radar,” Tarzia recalled. “But they made me an offer I couldn”™t refuse, so I thought, ”˜What the hell, I”™ll give it a shot.”™ Then we started selling the toys as soon as they came in, so it didn”™t take a lot to make the switch.”

Toy fads come and go, but “Legos are always hot. They never go out of style,” he said. Tween girls represent an especially lucrative sector, as demonstrated by the fact that all things BTS, the seven-member South Korean boy band, are flying off the shelves. Tarzia is also expecting big things when “Toy Story 4” opens in June.

Business at the new store has been pretty close to awesome, Tarzia said. “We”™re happy to have been welcomed into the Westport neighborhood and we”™ll continue trying to be the toy store they want us to be.”

Tarzia said he would like to open “a lot of stores” in Fairfield and Westchester counties, though he has no specific plans for further expansion at the moment.