St. Joseph’s Riverside among $60 million in brownfield grants | The Ohio Department of Development is providing funding for 78 projects, including approximately $54.8 million for 37 clean-up projects and $5.5 million for 41 assessment projects.
Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine and Lt. Gov. Jon Husted today awarded more than $60 million to help local communities clean up dozens of contaminated properties and create economic development.
Locally, Trumbull County Land Reutilization Corporation received $3.4 million for the environmental remediation and demolition of the former St. Joseph Riverside Hospital on Tod Avenue in Warren. The site will be revitalized for residential or commercial/industrial development.
As part of the new Ohio Brownfield Remediation Program, the Ohio Department of Development is providing funding for 78 projects, including approximately $54.8 million for 37 clean-up projects and $5.5 million for 41 assessment projects. These projects will impact communities in 35 counties across the state.
“These hazardous, decaying sites – some of which have been vacant for decades – are barriers to economic growth and community revitalization, but now, we’re going to help breathe new life into these areas,” said DeWine. “The projects we’re funding today will not only revive these sites for new development, but they’ll also improve quality of life and open the door for exciting new opportunities for the citizens of our state.”
DeWine announced the Ohio Brownfield Remediation Program grant awards this morning while visiting Mansfield, where a $3-million grant will be used to remediate petroleum tanks and hazardous chemicals at the remaining Westinghouse Electric Products buildings, which have been vacant since 1990. Westinghouse produced appliances such as electric ranges, curling irons and coffee makers beginning in 1918. The site is expected to be redeveloped into housing, businesses and/or green space.
Today’s grant announcement represents the first group of grants awarded as part of Round 1 of the Ohio Brownfield Remediation Program, with nearly $350 million to be invested in total across the state in coming months.
“More businesses are looking to expand in Ohio, but they need sites that are ready to go immediately,” said Husted. “By cleaning up brownfield sites, we are creating locations that are ready to accommodate a business expansion. We are also transforming communities by removing blighted buildings and turning those sites into new opportunities for economic development.”
Funds awarded today will help to assess and clean up industrial, commercial and institutional brownfield sites that are abandoned, idled or underutilized due to a known or potential release of hazardous substances or petroleum. Following site remediation, properties can be redeveloped to revitalize neighborhoods and attract new economic development.
”We’re very excited about the future of these sites,” said Lydia Mihalik, director of the Ohio Department of Development. “These grants will have a positive impact in our communities, helping them remove blighted properties and prepare sites for redevelopment.”
Among the 78 projects receiving funding:
- Port Authority of Allen County: $710,000 for asbestos abatement and demolition of the former Allen County Home, vacant for more than a decade, to open the site for future redevelopment.
- Community Improvement Corporation of Belmont County: $84,150 for remediation of asbestos at Bellaire Hospitallocated in pipe insulation, window glazing, caulking, and floor tile to allow for future safe renovation.
- Westinghouse-Breakwater Properties (Cuyahoga County): $2.6 million for the abatement of hazardous materials and demolition of hazardous sites on a 3.6-acre property that houses an industrial facility, factory buildings and warehouses constructed in the 1890s. The site, most recently home to Paramount Stamping and Welding, is expected to be redeveloped into a mixed-use development space.
- Port of Greater Cincinnati Development Authority (Hamilton County): $900,000 for asbestos abatement at the Shillito West Building, formerly a department store at a key corner in the downtown central business district in Cincinnati. Once completed, the property can be rehabilitated or demolished for redevelopment.
- Lucas County Land Reutilization Corporation: $1 million for asbestos abatement and lead-based paint removal throughout the Spitzer Building in downtown Toledo, which was constructed in the 1890s as one of the earliest skyscrapers in Ohio. The site is expected to be redeveloped as a mixed-use residential and commercial space.
- Piketon Village (Pike County): $1.1 million for the removal of an underground fuel storage tank, asbestos abatement and soil remediation at the site of the former Piketon High School. The original 1975 gymnasium is expected to be renovated into an event center and there are plans for a new building to be constructed for commercial and office use.
- Portsmouth City Health Department (Scioto County): $151,500 for asbestos abatement at the former Martings Department Store in downtown Portsmouth. Constructed in 1909, the location has been vacant since early 2000. After abatement, the site is expected to be rehabilitated and opened as developable space.
- Century Plaza Hotel (Stark County): $3.4 million to remove materials containing asbestos from the city’s first skyscraper, the 1914 Renkert Building. The removal of toxic asbestos from the 10-story building will allow for the planned redevelopment of the building into a 92-room extended-stay hotel across from Canton’s Centennial Plaza.
- Trumbull County Land Reutilization Corporation: $3.4 million for the environmental remediation and demolition of the former St. Joseph Riverside Hospital. The site will be revitalized for residential or commercial/industrial development.
- Warren County Port Authority: $1 million to remediate vacant sites at the Middletown Towne Mall that have fallen into disrepair. The site is expected to be redeveloped as the Middletown Entertainment and Sports Venue.
The Ohio Brownfield Remediation Program was created with support from the Ohio General Assembly in the current operating budget. Today’s awards are the first group of funds from Round 1, with another group to be announced in the near future.
Funding for the program is first come, first served with a $1 million set-aside for each county. The Ohio Department of Development is accepting Round 2 applications until April 30 from counties that have not yet exhausted their $1 million set-aside.
A full breakdown of counties with remaining funds is available on the Ohio Department of Development’s website. All remaining funds not exhausted in the first two rounds will be made available statewide in Round 3, which will begin on July 1, 2022.
For more information on the Brownfield Remediation Program, visit Development.Ohio.Gov….
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