Politics & Government

New Haven To Get Funding For Blighted Property Remediation

Thursday, Gov. Ned Lamont announced $19M in grants to help assess and remediate properties across CT, including two New Haven sites.

The city will get  $646,500 to remediate and cleanup a portion of the historic Bigelow buildings at 198 River Street, which will be renovated and marketed for lease as office and light industrial use.
The city will get $646,500 to remediate and cleanup a portion of the historic Bigelow buildings at 198 River Street, which will be renovated and marketed for lease as office and light industrial use. (Ellyn Santiago/Patch)

NEW HAVEN, CT —Gov. Ned Lamont announced Thursday that his administration is awarding more than $19 million in state grants to help with the costs of assessing and remediating 31 blighted properties in 23 towns and cities across Connecticut for the purposes of putting them back into productive use.

“Cleaning up blighted properties that have been vacant for decades and putting them into productive use will ultimately generate back many more times the amount of these grants through private investments,” Lamont said. “If we remediate these properties now, we can turn an eyesore into an asset, revitalize neighborhoods, and transform otherwise unusable property into new space for businesses and residents.”

The grants are from the Connecticut Department of Economic and Community Development’s Brownfield Remediation Program. The funding from the state is expected to leverage approximately $156 million in private funding and help in the investigation and clean-up of approximately 418 acres of land.

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Two of the projects are in New Haven:

Remediation/Assessment Projects

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  • New Haven: $646,500 to remediate and cleanup a portion of the historic Bigelow buildings at 198 River Street, which will be renovated and marketed for lease as office and light industrial use.

Assessment-only Projects

  • New Haven, 156-158 Humphrey Street: $75,000 for environmental assessments needed prior to conversion of a former auto repair garage site into a 12-unit housing complex.


“These investments in the remediation and assessment of contaminated sites are unlocking economic development opportunities all across Connecticut,” Department of Economic and Community Development Deputy Commissioner Alexandra Daum said. “They will create jobs, foster small business growth, allow for new recreational spaces, and expand housing options for our residents – all critical to building more vibrant communities and neighborhoods.”



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