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By Steve Dwyer
Green-building trends are picking up momentum, and rightly so. The Obama
administration has jumped on the green-build/energy efficiency bandwagon with
both feet flying, greasing the skids through funding, and seeing the powerful
benefits and payback these developments can yield.
Everything comes with a perception, real or imagined. Once, the perception of green-building initiatives was “costly,” “highly-ambitious,” even “pie-in-the-sky.”
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Renewal Magazine
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With the Washington budget showing no signs of a quick-and-easy resolution, federal brownfields programs are unlikely to get much of …
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Brownfields and crop development—for the express intent of producing foods—are concepts that have always been strange bedfellows. Mutually exclusive. An…
At this abandoned, blighted factory—consisting of 187,227 square feet in 21 different structures on 13.5 acres in the three…
PROJECT GOAL: To revitalize land that had been sitting idle for years by putting the property back into productive…
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Industry Profiles
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Deborah DeLuca Hennepin
Consultant who advising local units of government on brownfield redevelopment
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Barbara Rauch Oklahoma Dept. of Environmental Quality (DEQ)
Environmental attorney, Office of General Counsel
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Brownfield Stateside Report
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by Staff Report
In Michigan, some are predicting a better business climate for redevelopment and regulatory closure of contaminated properties thanks to a bill Michigan Governor Rick Snyder was scheduled to sign last week. The new regulations should have a positive impact on commercial real estate development and brownfields redevelopment resulting in the creation of jobs. |
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by VeruTEK
A property located on a bank of the East River and in a densely developed residential and commercial area, had its work cut out for it from an environmental remediation standpoint. The mission was to clean up the land and ultimately make one puzzle piece to a larger urban revitalization project that would be redeveloped as a public library and park ranger station.
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Industry Events
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Industry Experts
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Susan Boyle
Mt. Laurel
Senior Environmental Practice Leader, GEI Consultants
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