Brownfields
Success Story
Albany General Store
Albany, VT
A 100-year-old general store that closed eight years ago after a fire, has now
been redeveloped into an environmentally friendly modern-day general store
that serves the town of Albany, Vt, The store acts as a place for residents to
gather and connect outside of work and home.
Public and private groups came together to make this nearly $1 million project a
reality, 16 percent of the funding was provided through the EPA Brownfields
program. The value of this project shines through the fact that about half the
funds came through local donations which is a significant amount for this town.
Priming the Property for Redevelopment
The original general store, which closed after it was gutted by a fire in 2013,
was for sale for five years with no buyers stepping forward. In 2018, Albany
Community Trust, a community development non-profit formed by local
citizens purchased the store and a neighboring lot.
After the trust bought the site, it faced the challenge of paying off the initial
investment. Donations and state and federal grants funded the renovations,
including an expansion of the store. The next roadblock was environmental
contamination, including buried gas tanks and aging gas pumps on the property,
as well as the likelihood of isolated areas of petroleum contamination.
Extensive environmental studies turned up unexpected additional
contaminants, specifically arsenic, likely from the multiple fires on the property
and surrounding properties throughout the years.
The Lamoille County Planning Commission provided $32,894 in assessment
funding for the Phase 1 and Phase 2 site assessments conducted from April
2018 to February 2019 to determine the nature and extent of contamination. In
addition, the Northern Vermont Development Association provided an
additional $4,102 in assessment funding from September 2019 to February
2020 for cleanup planning Based on this work a plan was developed to clean up
the site by digging up the gasoline-contaminated soils and disposing of them
properly off-site. The plan was approved by the Vermont Department of
Environmental Conservation, giving the trust a green light to proceed. Site
cleanup can be very costly, especially for a small nonprofit. Luckily, the State of
Vermont was able to provide two key sources of funding to pay for the cleanup.
Vermont DEC provided $32,534 from the petroleum trust fund, and the Agency
of Commerce and Community Development provided an additional $17,850
from their Brownfields revolving loan fund program.
Pre-redevelopment of Albany General Store.
Credit to Albany Community Trust
EPA Grant Recipient:
Lamoille County Planning Commission
Northeastern Vermont Development
Association
Vermont Agency of Commerce and
Community Development
Grant Types:
Assessment, Revolving Loan Fund
Current Use:
General Store
Former Uses:
General Store
&EPA
United States
Environmental Protection
Agency

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Today
.*.? ¦ :
Redeveloped Albany General Store.
Credit to Albany Community Trust
The clean-up of this
property and re-opening of
our general store has already
had a transformative impact
on this community just after
two months. We know this
new building will be an
important part of Albany for
decades to come/1
The general store re-opened in June 2021, after sitting idle for almost eight
years. The new store anticipated immediately created six full time jobs, an
economic benefit in a village that has no other commercial venues. Besides
acting as a "third place" for residents to gather outside their homes or work,
the store will support local artisanal businesses by featuring local Albany
products such as milk, cheese, chicken, apple cider products, and jewelry.
The redevelopment of the Albany general store spurred the creation of Albany
Community Trust, a non-profit that will continue to exist and will use some of
the revenue from its lease to fund other projects. The organization has
considered funding improved signs for snowmobile and mountain-bike trail and
the re-use of the village's former historic schoolhouse as a new home for the
library, historical society, and co-working space.
-Hannah Pearce, Albany Community
Trust President
Then
April 2018
September 2018
August 2020
June 2021
Now
Phase I
Cleanup Complete
Redevelopment
Complete
For more information:
Visit the EPA Brownfields website at www.epa.gov/brownfields or contact
Christine Beling, 617-918-1792 and beling.christine@epa.gov.
EPA 901-F-21-007
July 2021

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