Brownfield Renewal

September 2009
Greensboro, Meet Brownfield
By Steve Dwyer



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Back in 2002, local developers had their sights set on a 12-acre parcel in downtown Greensboro, N.C., recognizing it as a potentially prime spot to construct a multi-use sports stadium. The operative word is "potentially." After further review, the development team changed its mind—scared off by what they called a "dirty" piece of property, marked mainly by petroleum contamination. While the project team picked up their ball and went home—or elsewhere—the city of Greensboro, picked up the ball and ran with it, crafting an ambitious plan for re-development. In 2003, the city's planning team developing its own vision about what the 12-acre parcel could become. Currently, the city is moving through the process of breaking ground—in 2010 most likely—on what will be known as The South Elm Street Redevelopment project, located on the southern edge of Greensboro's downtown core. South Elm is expected to serve as "the anchor" for the next phase of redevelopment in Greensboro, which is located in the north-central part of North Carolina. Once completed, the development will connect key residential and commercial corridors.

The 12-acre parcel is regarded as a natural, southern gateway to the downtown sector, and "its rejuvenation is critical to the city's ongoing renaissance," said Catherine Timko, CEO of Community Retail Catalysts, a Washington, D.C.-based economic development marketing firm that worked with the city on helping sell the project to the community. But South Elm Street has a distinction that's not lost on the city of Greensboro: It represents the first brownfield development to occur in Greensboro proper. The city, which has already built a reputation for its green building excellence, is confident that it also has the wherewithal to move forward with a successful brownfield project, and in the end make South Elm Street Redevelopment the success story they envisioned in 2003. ...


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Linda Lannen Linda Lannen
Chief Information Officer, Kleinfelder
San Diego, Calif.

Catherine Finneran Catherine Finneran
Brownfield Coordinator, state of Massachusetts
Boston, Mass.

Stephen S. Koenigsberg Ph.D Stephen S. Koenigsberg Ph.D
Vice President, Adventus Americas, Inc.
Corona del Mar, Calif.





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 28 percent approximate amount of all energy used in the Unites States for transporting people and goods from one place to another.
Source U.S. Department of Energy
 200-300 estimated number of hydrogen-fueled vehicles in the United States today
Source U.S. Department of Energy
 9,783,000 number of barrels of crude oil the United States imports each day.
Source U.S. Department of Energy
 1 million number of gallons of fresh water that can be contaminated from the used oil from one oil change.
Source U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
 20 million number of people that celebrated the first Earth Day on Aril 22, 1970.
Source U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
 $2.3 billion amount President Obama awarded for clean energy manufacturing projects across the United States
Source U.S. Department of Energy
 509 approximate number of operational landfill gas (LFG) energy projects currently in the United States. LFG electricity generation projects provide the energy equivalent of powering more than 920,000 homes annually
Source U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

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