11/26/2024
This week, we couldn't be more grateful for our partnership with Groundwork USA and the 21 Groundwork Trusts across the country who are engaging community members in transforming brownfield sites into vibrant community assets!
In the United States, there are more than 450,000 brownfield sites–lands suspected of being contaminated by hazardous substances or industrial pollutants, primarily located in low-income, neighborhoods with an industrial presence or history.
For over two decades, the National Park Service – Rivers, Trails, and Conservation Assistance program has worked in partnership with Groundwork USA, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Office of Brownfields and Land Revitalization, and community members to turn contaminated and underutilized spaces into vibrant parks, trails, and gardens. Through the Land Use Innovation Initiative, five Groundwork Trusts are receiving funding to transform forgotten areas in their communities into treasured green spaces!
Land Use Innovation projects create opportunities for community members to play a leading role in transforming brownfield sites while sparking innovation, leadership, and long-term investment in land revitalization. With this funding:
🌟 Groundwork New Orleans Green Teamers, high-school-aged environmental leaders, will create a brownfield inventory to track and record location, site condition, heat, and flooding concerns and conduct community interviews to identify opportunities for green infrastructure and new green spaces.
🌟Groundwork San Diego Chollas Creek will collaborate with community members, local organizations, and business leaders to develop a concept plan for transforming a 17-acre brownfield into a public green space and flood mitigation park.
🌟 Groundwork Ohio River Valley will engage their Roselawn Climate Action Group, a paid coalition of community members trained to facilitate climate adaptation conversations, in the creation of a community-wide brownfield reuse plan.
🌟 Groundwork Denver will support engagement activities in Sheridan to develop a brownfield site redesign plan that includes recreation and resilience design.
🌟 Groundwork Atlanta will engage the west side neighborhood in the creation of a brownfield communication and reuse hub that will help prioritize revitalization opportunities that meet the needs of the community.
These projects are not just about cleaning up land – they’re about empowering communities to create the healthy green spaces they want! Learn More about the Groundworks Program here: https://www.nps.gov/orgs/1973/index.htm
And learn more about the Land Use Innovation Grant here: https://groundworkusa.org/2024-land-use-innovation-grant/
Image 1: Left side is the West End Compost Hub site, where Groundwork Rhode Island (GWRI) and partners are constructing a compost facility to process food scraps from the community. The right side is a rendering of the West End Compost Hub, incorporating feedback from the community, including solar panels, green space, and art. GWRI was one of the first Groundwork Trusts to be selected during the first round of the Land Use Innovation Grants from 2022-2024. Photo courtesy of GWRI.