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untanglingwebs
El Supremo
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Kurtz has initiated plans with the land Bank to create the Green corridor along the Flint River as part of the plans to revitalize downtown and kettering.
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REIMAGINING Chevy in the Hole - Genesee County ...
www.thelandbank.org/Landuseconf/Reimagining_Chevy_in_the_Hole.pdf- Similarto REIMAGINING Chevy in the Hole - Genesee County ...
130-acre property known in Flint as “Chevy in the Hole,” was .... concerns of GM and Delphi about liability issues surround- ... The green areas are likely to be the cleanest of the .... west corridor that mirrors Third Avenue and parcels for ...
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flint prp - Wade Trim
www.wadetrim.com/hamilton_dam/reports/flint_prp_draft_4-13-04.pdf
Stadium. Glenwood. Cemetery. Flint River. Swartz. Creek. 3rd Avenue. Delphi. Automotive .... segment extends from the confluence of Swartz Creek, west to the Saginaw County line. ..... to naturalize and green the Flint River corridor. They are ...
Tree planting at Chevy in the Hole to help clean up ...
www.mlive.com/news/flint/index.ssf/2011/07/tree_planting_at_chevy_in_the.ht...
Jul 29, 2011 ... Flint Journal file photoThe former Chevy in the Hole site is shown in this 2009 file photo. ... property and transform it into a low-maintenance green space. ... plan to make over the Flint River corridor and the Chevy in the Hole site, which ... The smaller portion of the complex west of Chevrolet requires a more ...
City of Flint plans to transform Chevy in the Hole ...
www.mlive.com/news/flint/index.ssf/2009/11/city_of_flint...- Similarto City of Flint plans to transform Chevy in the Hole ...
Nov 4, 2009 ... “We're going to turn this old abandoned site into a new green corridor,” Flint Mayor Dayne Walling said. While converting brownfields to parks ... |
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Thu Dec 20, 2012 5:06 am |
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untanglingwebs
El Supremo
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2012 EFM 174
submitted 11-3-12
adopted 12-4-12
Posted 12-11-12
RESOLUTION AUTHORIZING THE CITY OF FLINT TO ENTER INTO AN
AGREEMENT WITH THE GENESEE COUNTY LAND BANK AUTHORITY TO
COMPLETE WORK IN ACCORDANCE WITH A PROSPECTIVE PURCHASER’S
AGREEMENT BETWEEN THE CITY OF FLINT AND THE ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY FOR OWNERSHIP INTEREST IN FIVE PARCELS
OF REAL PROPERTY LOCATED IN THE CITY OF FLINT
BY THE EMERGENCY FINANCIAL MANAGER:
The City of Flint (the “City”) plans to have ownership interest in five (5) parcels of property, commonly known as Delphi Flint West Site, which the City intends to convert into a green corridor; and
The City and the Environmental Protection Agency (the “EPA”) have entered into an Agreement, Order on Consent, and Covenant Not to Sue the City of Flint, MI, also referred to as the Prospective Purchaser’s Agreement (the “PPA”), for said property; and
Compliance with the PPA is contingent upon the City completing each of nine (9) tasks listed and scheduled in accordance with a PPA Work Plan. $1.6 million, funded by a subgrant made to the City from a Brownfield Revolving Loan Fund grant held by Genesee County, is available to fund activities required by the PPA and Work Plan; and
The City and the Genesee County Land Bank Authority (the “Land Bank”), a county land bank fast track authority, desire to enter into an agreement whereby the Land Bank will complete the 9 tasks listed in the Work Plan to the satisfaction of the EPA, complete the Work to be Performed per the PPA, prepare the Due Care Plan per the PPA, and fully comply with the
Cooperative Agreement between the City and Land Bank; and
The Land Bank has selected AKT Peerless to serve as environmental consultant to assist the Land Bank in completing the Work in compliance with this Agreement.
IT IS RESOLVED that the Agreement between the City of Flint and the Genesee County Land Bank Authority, in the form presented, for work in accordance with a Prospective Purchaser’s Agreement between the City of Flint and the Environmental Protection Agency is hereby approved. |
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Thu Dec 20, 2012 5:15 am |
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untanglingwebs
El Supremo
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Flint's Chevy in the Hole redevelopment discussed at Kettering University
By Blake Thorne | bthorne1@mlive.com
on January 29, 2013 at 5:30 PM, updated January 29, 2013 at 5:31 PM
FLINT, MI -- The future of the vacant Chevy in the Hole manufacturing complex could include Kettering University using the rehabilitated green space for instruction, research or recreation, officials behind the rehabilitation said at the Flint college Tuesday.
The 200-acre site was home to automobile manufacturing as early as 1916 and hosted the famous Flint Sit-Down Strike in the 1930s.
The property has been vacant since 2004, when the last of the plants was closed and demolished.
Ownership of the property is in the process of transferring to the city of Flint, which obtained it from the Flint Economic Development Corp. last year.
Joel Parker, a senior engineer for Environmental Consulting & Technology Inc. and project designer/engineer for the Chevy in the Hole project, and Steve Montle, a fellow with the Center for Community Progress, told the group of about 50, mostly students, about the property's history, the plans for it and how the redevelopment approach was shaped.
"There was really no economic driver to do anything with this," Parker said.
"With Chevy in the Hole, a bunch of us were sitting around, going, 'What do we do with this thing?'" he added.
Unlike many other industrial redevelopment projects, this project doesn't include a developer coming in with big plans and a big bankroll.
"We can take advantage of the fact that we have time and we have space," said Parker.
The two pointed to the efforts that have already happened at the site, such as planting trees and installing a city composting operation.
"In 20 years, in 10 years, we'll have a site that is cleaner than it is today and looks better," Montle said.
The Michigan Department of Environmental Quality has recently said the composting site has been having "some compliance issues."
Also, $1.6 million in federal grant funds are expected to pay for environmental studies, cleanups and soil capping on 60 acres of the site.
Blake Thorne covers K-12 schools and higher education for The Flint Journal. Contact him at bthorne1@mlive.com or 810-347-8194. Follow him on Twitter or Facebook. |
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Wed Jan 30, 2013 2:25 pm |
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