Brownfields

Success Story

Creative Paper and
Packaging Co.

Worcester, Mass

Ninety new apartments will soon be available on five acres that once hosted
a paper recylcing company. The site of the former Creative Paper and
Packaging Co. is the future home of a $20 million development of one- and
two-bedroom apartments. The site is located along the James Street Corridor
in Worcester, which is a gateway to the city from the southwest. This area
has been recognized by the state as having environmental justice concerns
with a high minority population, high unemployment and high asthma rates.

The Creative Paper and Packaging Co., a 124,100-sqaure-foot single-story
building at 175 James St., was used as a cardboard recycling facility from the
1980s through 2011. Prior use of the property was as a cardboard box
manufacturer. In 2011, the company ceased operations at the site, and the
site sat empty. In January 2012, a portion of the roof collapsed, and all
utilities were shut off, including water for fire suppression.

Phase I Apartment Construction (photo credit: City of
Worcester)

Priming the Property for Redevelopment

The Worcester Fire Department contacted EPA's Emergency Response
program in early 2013 with concerns about barrels of chemicals remaining in
the 57-year-old building. EPA found multiple 55-gailon drums and containers
of hazardous, ignitable, corrosive, and reactive chemicals along with asbestos
pipe insulation in the building.

At the request of the Massachusetts Department of Environmental
Protection, EPA's Emergency Response program did a cleanup in the summer
and fall of 2013 to address the most time-critical issues at the site. This short-
term cleanup cost $191,000 and included removing the drums, containers,
and asbestos pipe insulation.

&EPA

United States
Environmental Protection
Agency

Inside of abandoned site prior to cleanup (photo credit:
City of Worcester)

EPA Grant Recipient:

City of Worcester, Mass

Grant Types:

Assessment, Cleanup, and
Revolving Loan Fund

Current Use:

Townhouse-style Housing

Former Uses:

Cardboard Recycling Facility


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The City of Worcester remained concerned about the vacant site because of
additional asbestos in the building and residual contamination in the soils
and wanted to see it redeveloped for a productive purpose. Because of their
extensive experience with EPA's Brownfields program, the city charted a
course to take control of the property and use the Brownfields process to
complete cleaning up the site and readying it for redevelopment.

The City of Worcester took ownership of the property through tax
foreclosure in 2014, rezoned the parcel as residential, and asked for
proposals to redevelop the property. Through this process, a private
developer was selected to redevelop the site into much-needed market rate
housing that would transform the James Street corridor. The developer
funded Phase I and II environmental assessments from 2016 through 2019 to
further characterize any residual pollution left on the site after the EPA
Emergency Response action.

Rendering affinal project (photo credit: City of
Worcester)

Today

Through its Brownfields Revolving Loan Fund program, the city loaned the
developer $1.25 million in March of 2020 that paid to demolish the building,
remove additional asbestos and other hazardous building materials, and
excavate and remove soils contaminated with PCBs and arsenic. Phase I of
the construction developed 16 market rate apartments in 2022, ranging in
size from 900 to 1,200 square feet. The remaining phase of project will
include 74 additional units for a total of 90 units. The new apartment
complex, called 175 James Street, is revitalizing a gateway corridor that
welcomes people coming into Worcester. Investments from this project have
spurred other improvements along this corridor, including a mixed-use retail
complex, a new self-storage business, and improvements to nearby Hadwen
Park. Residents of the James Street Corridor are enjoying a revitalization of
their neighborhood with this project transforming an eyesore into rental
housing.

"A contaminated,
underutilized
property has been
remediated and put
back to productive
use, leveraging $20
million in private
investment to create
90 units of much
needed housing for
our community."

Peter Dunn

Chief Development Officer, City of

Worcester

Then

2013

2016

2018

2021

Now

EPA

Emergency
Response

Phase 1
Assessment

Supplemental
Assessments

Cleanup Complete
and Redevelopment
Started

For more information:

Visit the EPA Brownfields website at www.epa.gov/brownfields or contact
Katy Deng at 617-918-1286 or Deng.Katy@epa.gov

EPA 901-F-24-001
March 202.4

for informational use only - no endorsement intended


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