Brownfields

Success Story

Thornton Heights Common

South PortlandMaine

The site of a former church and school campus in South Portland has been cleaned of
contamination and redeveloped as affordable housing. With regional housing costs
spiraling upward, a local non-profit housing authority, South Portland Housing Authority
and its Development Corporation, is focused on creating opportunities for families in this
former industrial neighborhood.

The city of South Portland, located on the southern end of Portland Harbor, has a history
of industry that drove jobs and railroad expansion in the area. Thornton Heights was one
of many tightknit neighborhoods that grew out of this era. The St. John's Evangelist
church and school campus in South Portland, built in the 1960s, enlivened the
neighborhood for over 50 years. After years of declining attendance, the diocese left the
property in 2013, leaving buildings vacant, unmaintained and posing a risk to neighbors
as they deteriorated. The development corporation bought the property in July 2018
and, soon after, partnered with the Greater Portland Council of Governments to
evaluate potential cleanup alternatives for reuse. Asbestos was found in the buildings,
along with lead paint on surfaces and in soil. Low levels of polychlorinated biphenyls
were also found in building materials, and other wastes were found in the buildings.

Priming the Property for Redevelopment

For nonprofit organizations to move a project forward, they need to leverage funding
and get support from the community and the city or town. The development corporation
held three neighborhood meetings to discuss the project, gather input, and engage the
community. It also held smaller meetings with individuals surrounding the property and
municipal leaders. The non profit learned that saving the church was not a community
priority, and affordable housing and new commercial businesses along Main Street were
seen as providing greater benefits.

The South Portland Housing and Development Corporation received an EPA Brownfields
cleanup grant for $500,000 in June 2019. They worked closely with Cumberland County
and the Maine State Housing Authority to get Community Development Block Grant
funding to help pay for cleanup and demolition of the buildings. The development
corporation worked closely with Cumberland County on historic preservation elements
of the project and was able to save dozens of stained-glass windows from the church.
The development corporation hired specialists from the Catholic Diocese of Portland to
remove and preserve the windows. Large hanging light fixtures in the church and the
church bell were also saved and several smaller stained-glass windows were fashioned
into artwork for the lobby of the new building.

&EPA

United States
Environmental Protection
Agency

Thornton Heights Common (photo credit: SPHDC)

EPA Grant Recipient

South Portland Housing and
Development Corporation

Grant Types

Current Use

Mixed Use Commercial and
Affordable Housing

Former Uses

Church and School Campus

Stained glass windows from old church (photo
credit: SPHDC)


-------
Commercial space view of the housing complex (photo
credit: SPHDC)

"Quite simply, this
important housing and
revitalization project
would not have
happened, or been
possible, without the
Brownfields program."

Brooks More
Director of Development

South Portland Housing and
Development Corporation

The development corporation and its contractor worked closely with Maine
Department of Environmental Protection and EPA on cleanup plans. Once plans
were approved, the cleanup and demolition was completed in the Spring of 2020. It
included removing some 830 cubic yards of asbestos, 2000 tons of lead paint and
building materials containing PCBs, 230 cubic yards of soil, six fuel oil tanks, and
other regulated wastes from inside the former buildings.

A tight timeline for the transfer and acquisition of the property required close
coordination between the development corporation, its contractor, Maine DEP, and
EPA to ensure the cleanup followed state regulations and grant money was spent by
the time the EPA grant was closed. This coordinated effort led to the transfer of the
property in June 2020, followed by groundbreaking in July.

Funding Summary

Greater Portland Council of Governments - Assessment
Grant

$57,760

South Portland Housing Development Corporation -
Cleanup Grant

$500,000

City of South Portland - Community Development Block
Grant

$300,000

South Portland Housing Development Corporation

$15,000

Redevelopment Funds Leveraged by Brownfields
Investment

$11,580,000

Total:

$12,452,760

Today

Thornton Heights Common is a mixed-use building with 42 new affordable
apartments, 33 of which are subsidized and rent-restricted. The remaining nine
apartments will be rented at below-market rates. The ground floor has 7,000 square
feet of commercial space available for businesses and the entire building has energy
efficient utilities and fixtures and a rooftop solar array to provide clean energy. In
addition, three lots will be used for single-family homes next to the existing older
homes, creating a buffer for homeowners already living there. In 2022, the project
was recognized as one of seven Notable Projects by the Maine Real Estate and
Development Association.

Then	Now

June 2018	March 2019	May 2020	September 2021

Phase 1	Phase 2	Cleanup	Redevelopment

Assessment	Assessment	Complete	Complete

For more information:

Visit the EPA Brownfields website at www.epa.gov/brownfields or contact
Alan Peterson at 617 918 1022 or peterson.alan@epa.gov

EPA 901 F 22 002
August 2022

for informational use only no endorsement intended


-------