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  • 06 Aug 2018 3:10 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    News12 Brooklyn (NY)

    A vacant lot on Driggs Avenue could soon become home to new condominiums.

    It's currently a so-called brownfield site -- a former industrial lot that needs excavation and cleanup.

    Residents say they're excited to see it spruced up so long as it doesn't disrupt their neighborhood.

    The 40 new housing units will range in size from studios to four bedrooms. Many of them will have outer spaces inspired by McCarren Park, according to the developer.

    Construction is expected to begin this winter and conclude in 2020.

    For the entire story, including a video, see

    http://brooklyn.news12.com/story/38625030/former-williamsburg-industrial-lot-to-become-green-condominiums

  • 06 Aug 2018 3:08 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    by Diana Nelson Jones, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (PA)

    It has been seven years since McKees Rocks announced a mixed-use plan for 52 acres of a former Pittsburgh & Lake Erie Railroad site. The site was targeted in 2003 as a focus of the borough’s strategic economic revitalization.

    The McKees Rocks Community Development Corp. and borough council had worked out a plan for its reuse with Trinity Development, which contracted a design and a market study on which it based the funding it attracted.

    The plan was to include two buildings for light industrial use that would provide more than 1,000 jobs. But the developer has stepped away from the plan, and its advocates now say that 15 years of economic development effort may be in jeopardy.

    For the entire article, see

    http://www.post-gazette.com/business/development/2018/07/15/McKees-Rocks-Trinity-Development-CSX-intermodal-terminal-Community-Development-Corp/stories/201807150088

  • 06 Aug 2018 3:08 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    by Richard Liebson, Rockland/Westchester Journal News (NY)

    The state Department of Environmental Conservation is seeking public comment of a brownfield cleanup at the White Plains mall, which is to be torn down and replaced by a mixed-use development.

    WP Mall Realty, LLC, has applied for the designation, which could qualify it for cleanup funding as it moves forward with plans to build Hamilton Green on the 3.74-acre site at 200 Hamilton Ave.

    Plans call for the crumbling 1970s era mall to be demolished and replaced with a mix of apartments, retail and restaurant space, outdoor cafes, a craft food hall, a co-working enterprise, a publicly accessible elevated green space and parking. 

    The site recently received new Transit District zoning from the city.

    For the entire article, see

    https://www.lohud.com/story/news/local/westchester/white-plains/2018/07/30/dec-seeks-comment-brownfield-cleanup-white-plains-mall-site/797235002/

  • 20 Jul 2018 11:57 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    By Nicholas Buonanno, Troy Record (NY)

    Community members are invited to comment on a draft work plan being reviewed by the state Department of Environmental Conservation related to the brownfield site at the Cohoes/Saratoga Road Site, located at 401 Saratoga St.

    Officials from the DEC said in a fact sheet about the site that the draft work plan, called a “Remedial Investigation Work Plan”, describes the proposed approach to investigating the environmental contamination at the site.

    The fact sheet says that the draft work plan was submitted to DEC by Cohoes II Limited Partnership (the “applicant”) under New York’s Brownfield Cleanup Program (BCP). Dec said that the applicant will perform and pay for the investigation with oversight by DEC and the New York State Department of Health (DOH).

    For the entire article, see

    http://www.troyrecord.com/general-news/20180706/comments-sought-on-plan-for-cohoes-brownfield-site

  • 19 Jul 2018 9:55 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    By Jamie Stover, WFMZ TV-69 News (PA/NJ)

    The Easton Iron Works and Metal Company has seen better days. 

    The city has filed around 20 citations against the now deceased property owner's estate. 

    "It's mostly maintenance of the property, the weeds and all that, the structures, things like that," said Mayor Sal Panto.

    Once upon a time it was inspiration for artists like Karl Stirner, behind metal sculptures that now sit elsewhere in the city.

    For the entire story, see

    http://www.wfmz.com/news/lehigh-valley/future-unclear-for-former-easton-iron-works/763642828

  • 19 Jul 2018 9:53 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    A special state designation will allow Flushing to transform 62 acres of industrial wasteland into a new district with affordable housing. 

    By Danielle Woodward, Flushing-Murray Hill Patch (NY) 

    Acres of industrial wasteland that have long line Flushing's waterfront could soon give way to a vibrant new downtown area complete with affordable housing, thanks to a special designation from the state. 

    Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo in June designated 62 acres of land in west downtown Flushing as a "Brownfield Opportunity Area," a title that helps neighborhoods fast-track transformations of polluted industrial sites into housing or business developments that could drive economic growth. 

    "This Brownfield Opportunity Area program gives local leaders the power to bring about much-needed change to properties that have been neglected within their communities," Cuomo said.

    For the entire article, see

    https://patch.com/new-york/flushing-murray-hill/plans-redevelop-flushing-waterfront-get-state-approval

  • 18 Jul 2018 1:06 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    By Steve Wilson

    Federal Opportunity Zones will attract billions of dollars in capital investment from the private sector, U.S. Senator Cory Booker predicted Monday, boosting the prospects of both businesses and New Jersey’s poorest communities.

    Gov. Phil Murphy said his administration jumped on the opportunity the new federal program presented, getting zones designated in 75 communities in New Jersey.  “It’s the only part of the tax bill that we like,” Murphy said, referring to the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017. “We are head-over-heels in love with this.”

    The two were part of a panel discussion at the Investors Symposium hosted by Choose New Jersey at Rutgers-Newark. TV news anchor Steve Adubato led the discussion.

    NJBIA President and CEO Michele Siekerka called the program “a great opportunity for public private partnerships and an effective part of a comprehensive economic development strategy.

    “While the success of the Opportunity Zone program may ultimately depend on private investment commitment in each community, we feel strongly it can be an effective economic development tool that will help small businesses grow and create private sector jobs in some of the state’s most economically challenged cities,” Siekerka said.

    Federal Opportunity Zones allow for investments to be made in certain communities in return for reduced taxes on the capital gains they earn. If the investments are kept going for 10 years or more, investors could

    Over 200 investors, economic developers and business and community leaders attended, according to Murphy’s office.

    The idea is to get “parked” capital invested back into areas that are emerging economically.

    “When it’s all said and done, I think the capital you are going to attract to New Jersey won’t be measured in the millions, or even in the hundreds of millions.  I think your efforts will bring billions of dollars of new investment into our state, grow our tax base, and create more revenue for all,” Booker said.

    The program will be run by the New Jersey Department of Community Affairs. For more details, visit the department’s website here.

  • 11 Jul 2018 3:08 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    By Steve Dwyer 

    Armed with a mission to create a network of worker-owned enterprises as a vehicle to lift people out of poverty, a greenhouse in Springfield, Mass. built on a brownfield is proving to have a multi-faceted set of advantages -- from reducing the carbon footprint to sourcing fresh produce locally to providing an economic boost to the local community.  

    The project is regarded as the first worker cooperative commercial greenhouse in Massachusetts, and it recently commenced production on a former contaminated industrial site in this sleepy community west of Boston. 

    Lettuce with the label “Grown in Indian Orchard” is going to be shipped to produce aisles of some local stores—as well as in salads made for cafeterias in public schools and hospitals.

    Full production is commencing this summer at Wellspring Harvest, a 15,000-square foot state-of-the-art hydroponic greenhouse built on a former brownfield site in Springfield’s Indian Orchard neighborhood.

    Fred Rose, co-director of Wellspring Cooperative Corp., the parent organization of the greenhouse said in a local news report that the project was four years in the making as it took a long time to execute the business plan, perform site selection before a year of construction was able to start. Wellspring raised $250,000 of the $1.5 million for the greenhouse project through a direct public offering to individual investors.

    Built on the site of a former valve factory where components for nuclear weapons were manufactured, the greenhouse culminates the redevelopment of blighted land once contaminated by radioactivity. 

    The greenhouse will produce a variety of lettuces, greens and herbs year-round for customers that include the Springfield Public Schools, a medical center, a hospital, supermarkets and regional food co-ops.

    The principals said demand is strong and are confident the greenhouse will meet its sales projections, as fresh produce can be picked and be on the shelf the same day. Produce shipped from California loses half its nutritional value in the week it takes to arrive to its final destination, so this alternative makes food healthier, fresher and locally sourced—an ideal farm-to-table scenario. 

    The greenhouse also helps reduce the local carbon footprint imposition and adds an economic component to the local community, including jobs.  

    The principals said the greenhouse is as much “machine as a building.” That’s because a motorized roof and a series of wall vents control temperature and humidity. The flow of nutrients and oxygen to the plants is mechanically regulated, and vegetable beds sit on tables. A monorail system with baskets connects the growing and processing areas, so the produce never touches the ground.

    With lettuce there’s concern about contamination so growing hydroponically serves as a clean, local and secure solution. The principals said there are tentative plans to expand production in a few years to include cucumbers and tomatoes.

    There are other examples of how going green in an urban setting can provide a major boost in several aspects. 

    In 2015, Newark, N.J. became the home to the largest indoor vertical farm in the world. The RBH Group, Goldman Sachs Urban Investment Group, Prudential Financial Inc. and AeroFarms all partnered with Newark city officials and the New Jersey Economic Development Authority on what is now a $30-million renovation that converted an old industrial site into a vertical urban farm.

    The site, a 69,000 square foot converted steel factory, serves as the headquarters for AeroFarms, a company that grows leafy greens in indoor, urban facilities. The facility was reported to be producing about two million pounds of green vegetables and herbs each year and brought a host of new jobs to the city. 

    So many other examples of green development, including green roof systems, are springing up within the BCONE region and across the country, operating on a theory that you can make even more of a compelling difference within your redevelopment plan when you position green on a former brownfield.  

  • 11 Jul 2018 2:05 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    By ANDY GARDNER, North Country Now (NY)

    The way the Town Council handles zoning of the former General Motors plant could affect their ability to receive Brownfield Opportunity Area funding through the Department of State, a DOS official told the board on Wednesday.

    Designation as a BOA "sets the stage for future support, funding preference, and removes some of the risk and uncertainty associated with site redevelopment," according to a document from the St. Lawrence County Planning Office.

    A Brownfield Opportunity Area study of the site, which was recently completed and made public, outlines numerous uses for the former industrial lot, once environmental remediation is complete. The county Planning Office and other local people and entities gave input into writing the plan. Department of State funded it, somewhere in the range of $360,000 to $400,000, according to Dave MacLeod from the DOS, who spoke at the meeting.

    He urged the town to rezone the lot, because, according to him, many of the uses in the plan aren't allowed under the current industrial designation.

    For the entire article, see

    http://northcountrynow.com/business/former-gm-plant-massena-could-qualify-brownfield-cleanup-support-funding-0237318


  • 11 Jul 2018 2:04 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    By Anthony Salamone, Allentown Morning Call (NY)

    The economy in this Bucks County borough once revolved around U.S. Gauge, a manufacturer of aircraft-measuring instruments established in the early 20th century.

    The company, which employed as many as 1,700 people at its Sellersville plant in the mid-1980s, saw employment dip a decade later to just 600 workers. By the early 2000s, the manufacturing campus, then owned by Ametek, had closed, its sprawling buildings leveled.

    On Thursday, county officials and others celebrated a new beginning for the brownfield site with the groundbreaking of a $8 million plant and headquarters for Solar Manufacturing Inc., a maker of vacuum heat-treating furnaces.


    For the entire article, see

    http://www.mcall.com/business/mc-biz-bucks-county-solar-manufacturing-groundbreaking-20180619-story.html

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