That would be nice...
Chris, Any update on the Vought-Sikorsky / Avco-Lycoming plant ?
Thanks,
Phil
Just this recent article in the Post. (See Below). While the CASC has always been told that it will have a place somewhere on the property, we are skeptical at what that promise would amount to. Our biggest fear is the entire property will be raised, leaving no trace of the industrial might that was this plant, and leave us with an office sized room to "display" artifacts. What we need is some sort of assurance the portion of the plant that the CASC has always inhabited (Bldg 6, 53, and 61) would be retained for us to redevelop into a full-blown museum. I can't tell you how many times I've walked through the museum and envisioned what we could do there. It truly could be a culturally significant place, inside a historic hangar. Same thing that we are doing with the Curtiss Hangar across the street. But we truly need both spaces. The Curtiss Hangar for completed aircraft and displays, while Bldg 6 for storage, workshops, classrooms, and additional displays.
https://www.ctinsider.com/local/ctpost/article/Stratford-details-first-big-piece-of-Army-14847839.php?cmpid=gsa-ctpost-result&_ga=2.105184965.733335475.1574700612-1730828768.1569515607STRATFORD — A cleanup plan for coastal wetlands on the former Army Engine Plant property calls for dredging up enough contaminated dirt from the site to fill the U.S. Capitol rotunda nearly three times over.
The massive cleanup is years away — and roughly $80 million, by one early estimate — from actually getting done.
And the first step won’t involve the sprawling, 76-acre former factory portion of the property fronting Main Street in Lordship that churned out aircraft engines and planes for nearly seven decades before closing in the late 1990s.
But Mayor Laura Hoydick said it’s a critical next step in “the single largest economic redevelopment opportunity in Stratford.”
Officials will discuss the cleanup proposal in more detail — and residents can make comments — at a public meeting scheduled for 6:30 p.m. Dec. 10 in the Baldwin Center, 1000 West Broad St., which will be conducted by the Army Corps of Engineers.
The property is still owned by the federal government, but the Army has selected Point Stratford Renewal LLC to redevelop it eventually into a mixed-use neighborhood of condominiums, shops, a marina and other attractions.
Those plans are still well down the road, but the cleanup of the roughly 48 acres of tidal flats along the Housatonic River — and a drainage ditch to the southeast of the property — represents the tumbling of one major stumbling block, Hoydick said in a prepared statement announcing next month’s hearing.
“This is the first thing that needs to happen at the site before planned redevelopment activity can take place,” she said. “One of the significant obstacles to this project moving forward has been getting agreement between federal and state authorities on a plan for the environmental remediation of contamination left behind from the plant in the mud flats along the Housatonic River. We have that now.”
Chris Pia, a Town Council member whose District 1 covers the property, said the property’s redevelopment represents “a beautiful, wonderful opportunity for the town.”
“The biggest question that I’ve continued to receive since first running (for office) two and a half years ago is ‘What’s going on with the Army Engine Plant?’” Pia said.
“I know the mayor is working every single week on it with the Army Corps of Engineers, DEEP and the developers,” he said. “When you’ve got so many different large parties involved, things take time. I want this thing back on the tax rolls as soon as possible because it’s only going to benefit the town and the residents of Stratford.”
Contamination aside, the former Avco-Lycoming plant — which went by several other names over the decades — sits on prime real estate.
Near the mouth of the Housatonic River, it offers expansive views of the river and the Sound beyond, the marsh known as the Charles E. Wheeler Wildlife Area and the Connecticut Audubon preserve on the Milford Side of the waterway.
But its former industrial use has left a toxic legacy, according to a summary of the cleanup proposal prepared by the Army Corps.
The wetlands are contaminated by a host of PCBs, metals like arsenic, mercury and cadmium, and a number of other polysyllabic substances like “benzo(k)fluoranthene.”
Testing has been done on the wetlands to see which parts are worst.
“Some of the areas are more contaminated than others,” Remedial Project Manager Erika L. Mark of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers said Tuesday.
Some of the roughly 140,000 cubic yards of contaminated dirt will be taken offsite to special landfills, in accordance with the federal Toxic Substances Control Act.
The least contaminated dirt will be “stabilized” with cement and eventually used as fill on the former factory portion of the property.
The corps ballparked the cost of the cleanup near $80 million, with a timeline of three to four years, but Mark said those numbers could change as further details of the cleanup, currently being designed, get spelled out.
“We won’t have any more specific data until after the design is complete,” Mark said.
Comments or questions to can be sent to Mark via email at
Erika.L.Mark@usace.army.mil.
When the cleanup of the wetlands eventually gets done, the former factory part of the site will also need significant environmental remediation, the cost and timeline for which remain an open question.
A message was left with the developer Tuesday.
Hoydick said that after years of inactivity, she is looking forward to the property moving “from a fallow site where aircraft engines were once made to become a part of the economic engine of Stratford.
“We have all been frustrated by how much time has passed since the closure of the plant, to the point where things are really starting to happen,” she said. “This is really the first big piece in seeing that redevelopment goal realized.”
In a statement Wednesday, Kristina Rozek, Director of Communications for the Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection, said DEEP “strongly supports the efforts of the U.S. Government to move forward with the remediation of the tidal flat located along the Housatonic River and adjacent to the Stratford Army Engine Plant site.”
“DEEP commends all stakeholders in working cooperatively to prepare for the environmental cleanup work to move forward, and looks forward to working with all stakeholders on future plans for site reuse,” Rozek said.