JEFFERSON SCHOOL APARTMENTS PHASE II
Utah DEQ
Assessment Grant
Engaging Communities in Healthy Living through Revitalization
ADDRESS: 103 I South West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, UT 841 15
PROPERTY SIZE: 2.57 acres
FORMER USES: Wholesale produce company warehouse and trucking,
a tiling company, and auto and lumbering operations
CURRENT USE: Residential
EPA GRANT RECIPIENT:
The Utah Department of
Environmental Quality was
awarded a $200,000 EPA
Brown fields Assessment Grant.
PROJECT PARTNERS:
Redevelopment Agency of Salt Lake City,
Housing Authority of Salt Lake City, U.S. Bank,
Enterprise Social Investment Coalition, and
American Express Centurion Bank
Salt Lake City
UTAH
For additional data and
geographic information
for this and other
Brownfields Grants,
please visit EPA's:
Envirofacts -
www.epa.gov/enviro/
html/bms/
bms_query.html
Enviromapper -
www.epa.gov/enviro/bf
PROJECT BACKGROUND:
Located in a largely commercial and light industrial area of Salt Lake City, this 2.57-acre property was once the site of
a tiling company, auto and lumbering operations, and more recently, a wholesale produce company. Though the
surrounding neighborhood had long been unattractive to developers, construction of the 84-unit, Jefferson School
Apartments Phase I complex only a couple of blocks away (part of a redevelopment surge brought on by the city's
hosting of the 2002 Olympic winter games) led to the property being considered as a second phase of the same
apartment complex—Jefferson School Apartments Phase II. Through funding obtained from partners including U.S.
Bank, the Enterprise Social Investment Coalition, and American Express Centurion Bank, the Housing Authority of Salt
Lake City purchased the property in 2004. That same year, EPA Brownfields Assessment Grant funds were used to
help define the extent of contamination from a 4,000-gallon underground storage tank (UST) discovered during
preliminary construction activities, which included elevated levels of petroleum in the site's soil and ground water.
Cleanup was completed by March 2005, which included removal of the UST, excavation of the contaminated soils,
and remediation of the property's ground water.
KEY ACCOMPLISHMENTS:
• Leveraged $8,100 from the Housing Authority of Salt Lake City
for cleanup activities.
• Removed a 4,000-gallon underground storage tank, excavated petroleum
contaminated soils, and remediated the site's ground water.
• Leveraged $5.5 million for redevelopment in the form of a loan
from U.S. Bank.
• Provided much needed affordable housing in Salt Lake City.
OUTCOME:
View of the new clubhouse/office
and new apartment buildings.
U.S. Bank's $5.4 million loan funded construction of an 84-unit, mixed-income apartment complex on the property.
Development began in May 2004 and was completed in March 2006. Already, nearly 90 percent of the apartments
are leased. This second phase of the Jefferson School Apartments includes affordable one- and two-bedroom units, a
courtyard, and amenities that include a pool and an exercise room. The apartments are conveniently accessible to the
light-rail transit line, downtown, and to the University of Utah, providing maximum benefit to working and student
residents.
FOR MORE INFORMATION: Visit the EPA Brownfields Web site at http://www.epa.gov/brownfields/ or call EPA Region 8 at (303) 312-6312
------- |