Brownfields

Success Story

EPA Grant Recipient:

Town of Brattleboro, Vermont River
Conservancy

Grant Types:

Assessment, Cleanup

Current Use:

12-acre park and floodplain

Former Uses:

Industrial- lumber storage and uses

250 Birge St.

Brattleboro, Vt.

Located along the Whetstone Brook, this 12-acre site formerly used as a
sawmill and for storing lumber has been cleaned and redeveloped as a park
and restored floodplain that will help protect downtown Brattleboro from
future flooding and storms.

In the 1800s, Brattleboro was a regional center for trade due to accessibility
to waterpower and major transportation, Watermills, sawmills, gristmills, and
manufacturing shops became a central source of economic activity, earning
the area the nickname of "Sawdust Alley." Beginning in the late 1880s, the
Estey Organ Company, the largest organ manufacturer in the United States,
operated its main factory at 250 Birge St. After Estey closed and sold the
factory in the 1960s, a private company used the site to store lumber until it
became vacated.

Priming the Property for Redevelopment

With the property's prolonged use as industrial storage for 120 years, the site
was filled with gravel, elevating the land above the river until it no longer
functioned as a floodplain. As a result, when Tropical Storm Irene swept
through Brattleboro in 2011 destroying homes and businesses, the floodplain
was unable to absorb the excess water.

After repetitive damage to downtown Brattleboro from Irene and other
flooding events, the state and local entities determined that floodplain
restoration projects were a priority. In 2015, the Town of Brattleboro received
$400,000 in EPA Brownfields funding to assess environmental challenges
throughout the town, develop cleanup plans, and get community input. The
town invested $72,000 of this funding to evaluate possible contaminants at 250
Birge Street. Assessments in 2016 and 2017 found polycyclic aromatic
hydrocarbons in the soil and gravel fill.

&EPA

United States
Environmental Protection
Agency

Aerial image of the floodplain alongside the Whetstone
Brook at 250 Birge Street (photo credit: Vermont River
Conservancy)

Tree plantings on the restored Whetstone Brook
floodplain (photo credit: Vermont River Conservancy)


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Newly planted saplings and flowers on the restored
Whetstone Brookfloodplain (photo credit: Vermont River
Conservancy)

Vermont River Conservancy purchased the site in 2017 and received
$200,000 from EPA's Brownfields program in 2018 to clean the site. In August
2023, cleanup began with the excavation of about 10,000 cubic yards of
contaminated soil. The contaminated soil was buried on site in an area that
was uncontaminated. In addition, 55,000 cubic yards of gravel and a berm
alongside the brook was removed. With the completion of cleanup and
redevelopment of the natural floodplain, and a conservation easement in
place, ownership of the site will be transferred to the Town of Brattleboro.

Today

Reducing Brattleboro's climate vulnerability was essential to the
development of this park and restored floodplain as part of a larger effort by
local and state entities to help protect homes and business from future
floods. Climate-conscious strategies were at the forefront of site planning
and cleanup. Project redevelopment included sustainable land management
practices and the installation of green infrastructure. Additionally, invasive
vegetation was removed, and native bushes and trees were planted to
mitigate damage and catch flood debris from going downstream.

With the support of federal, state, and local partners, Vermont River
Conservancy and the Town of Brattleboro worked together to enhance the
town's climate resiliency. Vermont River Conservancy and the Town of
Brattleboro received a total of $2 million from the EPA, FEMA, the Vermont
Flood Resilient Communities Fund, Vermont Housing and Conservation
Board, and the Vermont Department of Environmental Conservation.

The restored floodplain now provides recreational activities as a public park
with access to the Whetstone Brook. In addition, the park allows for new
housing in the surrounding area. The successful redevelopment of this site
revitalized downtown Brattleboro while reducing environmental and climate
impacts to the community.

¦ * In June 2024, after a decade-plus of
multiple federal, state, and local
partners working diligently to
design, assess, engineer,
communicate, construct, and fund
brownfield cleanup and restoration
of a former industrial lumber yard,
our work is complete! The EPA
Brownfields Grant Program was the
first funding source that catalyzed
this complex and challenging project
and leveraged state and federal
(FEMA) dollars for environmental
assessments, archeological services,
and ultimately site clean-up as well
as floodplain restoration - removing
55,000 cubic yards of material,
planting approximately 4,500 stems
(beautiful river trees and edible
shrubs), and creating a low-impact
nature trail.	ft

Erin De Vries, Conservation Director of
Vermont River Conservancy

Then

July 2016, October 2017	February 2017

June 2024

Now

Phase 1
Assessment

Phase 2
Assessment

Cleanup and Redevelopment
Complete

For more information:

Visit the EPA Brownfields website at www.epa.gov/browrtfields or contact
Jess Dominguez at 617-918-1627 or Dominguez.Jessica@epa.gov

EPA 901-F-25-001
February 2025

for informational use only - no endorsement intended


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