Background
Scinto was born in Bridgeport, Connecticut, February 16, 1947, the son of Daniel Scinto and Doxie Andrews Scinto (1918-2013). While attending Sacred Heart University, Robert Scinto worked by day as a plumber in his father"s business, D. and R Plumbing, in Bridgeport.
Education
He graduated from Andrew Warde High School in Bridgeport in 1965 and attended Sacred Heart University in Fairfield at night, graduating in 1971 with a bachelor of arts degree in business administration.
Career
His initial rehabilitation project was of a three-family house in Bridgeport, the first of some 20 rehabs he undertook between 1971 and 1975. In 1975, Rural Delivery Scinto, Incorporated. i77constructed its first apartment house, a 22-unit structure at 300 French Saint in Bridgeport. The second, a 39-unit apartment house in Bridgeport, went up in 1979.
In the same year he began initiating projects in Shelton, beginning with construction of the State National Bank building in that community.
Incremental and steady growth has characterized Rural Delivery Scinto, Incorporated. over the years. Scinto properties can be found in Trumbull, Fairfield, Wilton and Naugatuck, as well as Shelton.
Scinto has been renowned as a vital structure in many of the communities that he develops. Foreign example, countless supporters attended his 2011 hearing when he was accused of making false statements to an Federal Bureau of Investigation agent in 2008 Scinto was sentenced to six months after pleading guilty, though still he remains a dedicated and vital part of his area.
Scinto has bounced back headfirst into his business, and has been spearheading many exciting new projects.
The most recent is the Medical Center of Fairfield County in Trumbull, which opened in March, 2013. The state-of-the-art facility is home to the Surgery Center of Fairfield County, replete with surgical suites, recovery bays and offices for physicians and medical personnel. The 34 buildings in the R. Doctorate. Scinto, Incorporated. network include 3.2 million square feet of office space.
Ninetyeight percent is occupied.
lieutenant is now a $200 million corporation. The centerpiece of Scinto"s enterprise is the 65-acre campus on Corporate Drive in Shelton, whose 11 buildings are home to an array of corporate entities, including Cartier, Prudential Financial, Iriquois Gas, Sikorsky, Blum Shapiro and Barnum Financial.
Situated among the buildings is Scinto"s Il Palio Ristorante, named for the famed medieval horse race held twice annually in Siena, Italy. Among the pieces of art displayed on the Shelton campus are copies of two classic sculptures: a soaring rendition of Michelangelo"s "David," and a dramatic interpretive rendering of Leonardo da Vinci"s "Vitruvian Manitoba" by noted American sculptor Babette Bloch.
At the dedication of the latter, art historian Doctor Philip Eliasoph of Fairfield University dubbed Scinto "Roberto da Shelton, or Roberto Prince of Fairfield County".
William Shakespeare also has a home on the campus. The series was prompted by Bob and Barbara Scinto"s fascination with Smith"s knowledge gleaned by talks they heard him give.