Title: Case Studies in Brownfield Redevelopment
1 Case Studies in Brownfield Redevelopment CREW
Midwest Regional Conference April 24,
2009 Moderator Christine Russell, Director of
Brownfield Development, Port of Greater
Cincinnati Development Authority Speakers Chris
Dobrozsi, Vice President of Real Estate
Development, Al. Neyer, Inc. David Birdsall,
Chief Development Officer, Phillips Edison
Company
2What is an Ohio Port Authority?
- Quasi-governmental organization
- Ohio port authorities promote economic
development within a specified jurisdiction - Port of Greater Cincinnati Development Authority
was jointly formed by the City of Cincinnati and
Hamilton County to perform brownfield
redevelopment and development bond financing
3Brownfield Redevelopment
150 acres, 10.72MM in Clean Ohio Fund Grants
4What is a Brownfield?
- Property that the expansion, redevelopment, or
reuse of which is complicated by the presence or
potential presence of environmental contamination - U.S. Environmental Protection Agency estimates
that there are more than 450,000 brownfields in
the United States
5Brownfield Challenges
- Added uncertainty associated with the cost and
schedule of environmental cleanup - Added complexity with potential grant
applications and additional team members needed
6Brownfield Benefits
- In industrial cities, the most well-positioned
properties may be brownfields - Take advantage of existing infrastructure
roads, sewers, water, public transportation - Potential for increased community and municipal
support of a redevelopment project - LEED credits for redeveloping a brownfield and
recycling demolition debris
7Brownfields in Ohio
- Clean Ohio Fund
- Up to 3 million in state-funded grants for
acquisition, assessment, demolition, remediation,
and infrastructure - Ohio Brownfield Revolving Loan Fund
- Low-interest loans for hazardous substance and
petroleum remediation
8Contact Information
- Christine Russell
- 513-621-3000
- crussell_at_cincinnatiport.org
- Chris Dobrozsi
- 513-271-6400
- cdobrozsi_at_neyer.com
- David Birdsall
- 513-554-1110
- dbirdsall_at_phillipsedison.com
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10BROWNFIELD REDEVELOPMENT
A Tale of Two Cities
Norwood, Ohio
- Chris Dobrozsi, CCIM
- Vice President, Real Estate Development
- Al. Neyer, Inc.
- April 24, 2009
Cincinnati, Ohio
11And, a Tale of Two Boys
12Who We Are
- Integrated real estate development,
design-build and asset management firm - Family business established in 1894
- Fifth generation of Neyer leadership
- Reputation for quality and integrity
- Current projects for Cincinnati Childrens
Hospital Medical Center, dunnhumbyUSA, Paychex,
Appliance Dealers Cooperative and State Farm
View testimonials at www.neyer.com
13Who We Are
- 82 million, 71 on staff
- Developers and financial analysts
- Architects and designers
- Engineers and construction professionals
- Asset and property managers
- 6 LEED Accredited Professionals
- Projects in 15 states
- Over 2 billion in development and construction
project experience
14Brownfield Development 10 Years Ago
15Today It Takes a Team
16Geographic Center of Cincinnati
17Former Globe-Wernicke Site, Norwood, Ohio
18Backstory
- Years in the Making
- Initially contacted GM in 1995
- GM 15.4 acres closed October, 2002
- First negotiated CNS for environmental
responsibility - Acquired additional 7.5 acres for multiple owners
over the next four years - Total of 23 Acres
- Received 750,000 Clean Ohio Fund Grant in 2005
19Due Diligence
1. Brownfield site/ Environmental (site
history) 2. Geotechnical investigations/ Existing
structures/Remnants 3. Utilities
infrastructure 4. Roadway infrastructure 5.
Development plan/ Zoning/ Surrounding
community 6. Incentives 7. Financing 8. Pro Formas
20Site Remediation
Permanganate Injection
Void Treatment
21Vision
22Fast Facts
- 22.7 acres
- 9 buildings planned about 600,000 sf
- Parking for 2,000 vehicles
- Completed value over 105 million
23Linden Pointe
24Linden Pointe
25Commercial Viability
Office and Retail Leasing SHP Leading
Design 22,405 square feet Public
Safety 4,009 square feet Brown Mackie
College 28,240 square feet Cumulus 16,288
square feet Shapiro, Van Ess Phillips,
L.L.P. 10,056 square feet Amedisys 3,500
square feet Huntington Bank 2,487 square
feet Papa Johns 2,034 square feet
26The Gold Standard
- SHP Leading Design built LEED-CI Gold certified
office space aligning with sites sustainable
identity.
27Norwood Community Benefits
- Over 2,000 jobs created
- 1.75 million in new property taxes
- New places to eat and shop
- Interesting architecture
- Green space in the city
- A truly blighted area replaced with an
attractive, bustling mixed-use center
28Norwood Community Benefits
29Metrowest Business Park
- Reclaimed Queen City Barrel site
- Environmental disaster zone
- 18 acres located 3 minutes from downtown
assembled by City of Cincinnati - Co-development of Al. Neyer and Resurgence Group,
LLC - 3M Clean Ohio Fund grant received in 2007
- Cleanup began May 2008 will be complete by May
2010 - Vision
- LEED rated industrial, flexand office park
- 250,000 SF when complete
30Southwest View from intersection of Evans and
South 5/08
31Underground Storage Tank 7/2008
32Backfilling Bldg 10 11 Basement Voids 9/08
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