Brownfields

Success Story

Photo Credit: Stone House

EPA Grant Recipient:

Stone House, Inc.

Grant Types:

EPA Cleanup Grant

The Stone House

Boston, Massachusetts

A haven for healing and renewal for almost 50 years, Stone House was able
to expand its domestic violence prevention and support services in Roxbury
and other Boston neighborhoods thanks to federal and local funding. With
construction of the new Roxbury facility, which opened in 2021, Stone House
will continue providing emergency services for individuals and families fleeing
domestic violence as well as supportive housing for those experiencing
homelessness,

Roxbury, not afforded the same economic development opportunities as
many other Boston neighborhoods, has seen many of its former industrial
sites shuttered, leaving abandoned buildings and vacant lots. Roxbury is a
diverse neighborhood with more children, minorities and low-income
populations than the state or nation as a whole.

Cleanup

After a devastating fire in 2007 destroyed its emergency shelter in Roxbury,
Stone House moved into its transitional housing facility. As demand for its
programs grew, the nonprofit organization began searching for a larger space
and found a suitable property at the corner of Washington Street and
Westminster Avenue in Egleston Square. This former single-story, 20,000-
square-foot building had been used as an automobile parking garage in the
1920s and later converted for mixed industrial, warehouse and automotive
repair until it was abandoned in 1996. Due to these past uses, there were
concerns that this property might be contaminated. Luckily, Stone House
applied for and received an EPA Brownfields grant in 2015, which helped
them clean up the site.

Stone House used its cleanup grant to remove asbestos and hazardous
building materials and dispose of 142 tons of soil contaminated with gasoline.
The cleanup was completed in 2018, and the building was demolished. The
new Stone House facility was finished in January 2021. In addition to cleaning
up this site and creating a new facility providing much-needed community
services, this project also generated 29 new jobs.

&EPA

United States
Environmental Protection
Agency

Current Use:

$27M Facility to support domestic
violence survivors in Roxbury's
Egleston Square neighborhood.

Former Uses:

Automobile parking garage, mixed
industrial warehouse, and
automotive repair facility

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Photo Credit: Stone House


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Photo Credit: Stone House

"It's hard to remember how badly
damaged this property was when we
bought it. It was a drag on the whole
neighborhood from every perspective
- safety, aesthetics, economics, social
well-being, and environment. Without
EPA funding, our project could never
have begun. That corner is now
flourishing, with 32 new housing units
for domestic violence survivors, a
state-of-the-art day care center, and
ample space for private counseling,
classes, and groups to support
domestic violence survivors as they
build better futures for themselves.
EPA funding helped transform not just
a piece of degraded property, but
thousands of lives."

EPA Brownfields Cleanup Grant	$ 173,000

Stone House Fundraising	$ 634,699

City of Boston	$2,100,000

TOTAL:	$ 2,900,000

$24,000,000 in other private and public funds for construction of the new
facility.

Today

Today, this five-story, 56,000-square-foot building provides 32 affordable apartments
for domestic violence survivors and will soon feature a licensed childcare center, a new
parking area, and community programming space. The Stone House, which serves over
2,000 survivors a year, offers shelter and transitional housing, as well as support
groups, classes, private counselling, and family-centered activities for children and
adults. Support groups and classes for Stone House and neighborhood residents cover
financial literacy, mental health, therapeutic childcare, client advocacy, and many
other topics. Around the building is a children's play area and a park with sloping,
landscaped hills and mature trees the create a calm place for clients to enjoy.

Nancy Owens Hess
CEO of Stone House

Then

October 2012

Phase 1
Assessment

November 2012

July 2018

January 2021

Now

Phase 2
Assessment

Cleanup
Complete

Redevelopment
Complete

For more information:

Visit the EPA Brownfields website at www.epa.gov/brownfields or contact
Amy Jean McKeown, 617-918-1248^ Ifl

EPA 901-F-23-001
January 2023


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