Former J»G« Wilson Corp Chesapeake, Virginia The Road to Reuse ~~~ The former J.G. Wilson facility located at 120 Jefferson Street in Chesapeake, Virginia has been identified as a key to Chesapeake's South Norfolk Borough redevelopment. The site was developed around 1905 as a manufacturing facility for metal and wood overhead doors. The J.G. Wilson Company filed for bankruptcy in 1991 and its property was acquired by Environmental Solutions, Inc. (ESI). ESI decommissioned the site and demolished the last of the manufacturing buildings in the mid- 1990s. The Virginia Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) is the lead agency for oversight of RCRA Corrective Action work at the facility. The investigations and any necessary cleanup activities at the facility are being implemented under the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) Facility Lead Corrective Action Program. Approximate total acres and current use Approximate Acres in Reuse: 8 Current Use: Planned office space, retail shops, housing In December 2003, Urban Design Associates presented the Poindexter Corridor Strategic Development Plan to the Chesapeake Economic Development Department. The J.G. Wilson property was proposed as South Norfolk's waterfront connection, offering residential (condominium) living and retail and commercial office space. The property has been rezoned under the City's urban PUD category which was developed to accommodate high density / high rise construction and allows up to two million square feet of buildings on this eight acre parcel. The land plan designates four city blocks and a marina. Two of the blocks consist of 375 residential condominiums. The third block is a 20,000 sq. ft. retail building with second floor restaurant space allowing for outside balcony dining. This building may include medical office space as well. The ' o www.epa.Ptov/rept3wcmii/correctiveaction.htm fourth block will provide for roughly 120,000 sq. ft. of office and 25,000 sq. ft. of retail space in a nine story building. The second floor is designed for river front restaurant space also with outdoor balcony dining. This is all served by an 850 space public parking deck which is wrapped by a four story residential rental apartment building yielding about 150 units. The marina is fiill service and programmed for over 150 boat slips, many over 60', with ships store and shower / laundry facilities on shore. The purpose of EPA's ongoing RCRA Corrective Action is to remediate the site to acceptable levels that will be protective of public health as it pertains to the proposed future land use, including commercial office space, retail, and residential (multi-family housing). For More Information EPA Region 3 Contact: Luis A. Pizarro, (215) 814-3444, pizarro.luis@epa.gov ------- |