“The FOCUS WV program allows the West Virginia Brownfields Assistance Centers at West Virginia University and Marshall University to provide financial and technical assistance to the selected communities to create redevelopment visions for some of their biggest eyesores,” said Sera Zegre, FOCUS WV program manager at WVU.
Funding for the Foundation for Overcoming Challenges and Utilizing Strengths (FOCUS) program is being provided by the Claude Worthington Benedum Foundation through the West Virginia University Foundation.
The winners, who will be using the $5,000 awards to create community-based revitalization plans, include:
• Arthurdale Heritage, Inc., to revitalize the Arthurdale school buildings in Preston County;
• Brooke-Hancock Regional Planning & Development Council, to attract private developers to Weirton’s North End in Hancock County;
• Central Appalachia Empowerment Zone of West Virginia, to convert an old rail yard into the JG Bradley Campground in Clay County;
• City of Parkersburg, to redevelop the FoamCoat waterfront property that was once a marble factory and a petroleum storage facility along the Little Kanawha River in Wood County;
• Coal Heritage Highway Authority, to establish a Coal Heritage Discovery Center in an underutilized historical structure in the town of Mt. Hope in Fayette County;
• Friends of Deckers Creek, to transform a former service station into the Pioneer Rocks Gateway in Monongalia County;
• Morris Creek Watershed Association, to design a “green” building to house an Environmental Educational Learning Center for Fayette and Kanawha Counties;
• Shepherdstown Public Library , to reclaim a dormant landfill as a site for a new, state-of-the-art “green” library in Jefferson County;
• Upper Guyandotte Watershed Association, to revitalize Horse Creek Lake in Wyoming County;
• Webster County Economic Development Authority, to redevelop the old Reiss-Viking magnetite processing plant along the banks of the Gauley River outside Camden in Webster County;
• Wes-Mon-Ty Resource Conservation & Development Project, Inc., to restore mine-scarred lands on Cheat Mountain at Barton Bench in Randolph County.
• Arthurdale Heritage, Inc., to revitalize the Arthurdale school buildings in Preston County;
• Brooke-Hancock Regional Planning & Development Council, to attract private developers to Weirton’s North End in Hancock County;
• Central Appalachia Empowerment Zone of West Virginia, to convert an old rail yard into the JG Bradley Campground in Clay County;
• City of Parkersburg, to redevelop the FoamCoat waterfront property that was once a marble factory and a petroleum storage facility along the Little Kanawha River in Wood County;
• Coal Heritage Highway Authority, to establish a Coal Heritage Discovery Center in an underutilized historical structure in the town of Mt. Hope in Fayette County;
• Friends of Deckers Creek, to transform a former service station into the Pioneer Rocks Gateway in Monongalia County;
• Morris Creek Watershed Association, to design a “green” building to house an Environmental Educational Learning Center for Fayette and Kanawha Counties;
• Shepherdstown Public Library , to reclaim a dormant landfill as a site for a new, state-of-the-art “green” library in Jefferson County;
• Upper Guyandotte Watershed Association, to revitalize Horse Creek Lake in Wyoming County;
• Webster County Economic Development Authority, to redevelop the old Reiss-Viking magnetite processing plant along the banks of the Gauley River outside Camden in Webster County;
• Wes-Mon-Ty Resource Conservation & Development Project, Inc., to restore mine-scarred lands on Cheat Mountain at Barton Bench in Randolph County.
More information about the FOCUS WV Brownfields Program, as well as testimonials from communities that received funding in 2009, can be found at www.wvbrownfields.com .
No comments:
Post a Comment