Browsers that can not handle javascript will not be able to access some features of this site.
Skip Navigation
Department of Environmental QualityMichigan.gov-Official Website for the Sta of Michigan
Michigan.gov Home DEQ_Home | Online_Services | Permits  | Programs | Site_Map | Contact_DEQ
Printer Friendly Version Printer Friendly   Text Only Version Text Version  Share this page.
DEQ Assists Lansing Redevelopment Efforts

Contact:  Robert McCann (517) 241-7397
Agency: Environmental Quality


September 25, 2008

Department of Environmental Quality Director Steven E. Chester announced today that two grants have been finalized and awarded to the city of Lansing for work associated with the revitalization of the downtown riverfront. The grants include a $3,197,970 grant associated with the redevelopment of the Ottawa Street Power Station for Riverwalk construction and a $1,000,000 grant to address environmental concerns and facilitate the redevelopment of the City Market site.

The former power station will become the site of the world headquarters for the Accident Fund Insurance Company, a project that will result in $117,000,000 in private investment and the creation of at least 500 full time jobs. The grant from the DEQ's Brownfield Redevelopment Grant and Loan Program will be used for the construction of walkways and boardwalks along both the east and west sides of the Grand River, outdoor seating areas, signage, and decorative lighting.

Construction of a new City Market, to be located adjacent to the riverwalk and Rlverfront Park, will soon be underway. Following the relocation to the new site, redevelopment of the current market, the Market Place Development project, will begin. The project will be a mixed-use development that will include retail, dining, and residential. The development is expected to leverage $28 million in private investment and create 50 full-time and 20 part-time jobs. The DEQ grant associated with this project will be used to perform environmental cleanup activities on the property, thus helping to facilitate the redevelopment.

"In these difficult economic times, it is important for us to encourage Michigan cities to make their communities places where people are eager to live, learn, and earn," said Director Chester. "Unfortunately, these projects represent nearly the very last of the remaining brownfield grant dollars available and underscore the need to find a new revenue source for Michigan's brownfield and cleanup funds."

Since its creation in 1988, the DEQ cleanup and redevelopment program has provided approximately $21.3 million on 108 projects in Ingham, Eaton, and Clinton Counties alone. These projects include funding for the development of Oldsmobile Park and the former Diamond REO site in Lansing and the $2.6 million cleanup of the Americhem Corporation site in Mason.

To date, the program has been primarily funded by voter approved bonds passed in 1988 and 1998. The last of the bond money will be exhausted by the end of 2008, leaving the $95 million a year program without continued operating funds.

An unfunded cleanup program means that ongoing cleanups will cease; the number of unaddressed contaminated sites will grow; unaddressed contamination at these sites may spread to adjacent properties; and redevelopment projects that create much needed jobs and private investment in our state, such as the Lansing Riverfront project, may be jeopardized.

Editor's note: DEQ news releases are available on the department's Internet home page at www.michigan.gov/deq.

"Protecting Michigan's Environment, Ensuring Michigan's Future"

Revised September 25, 2008 by Pat Watson

Michigan Business One Stop
Link to Department and Agencies Web Site Index
Link to Statewide Online Services Index
Link to Statewide Web-based Surveys
Link to RSS feeds available on this site
Related Content
 •  Saginaw Bay Coastal Initiative Presentation
 •  Settlement Reached with Bishop International Airport Authority
 •  Eastpointe Chiropractic Facility Receives Pollution Prevention Loan
 •  DEQ Releases Goals for Protecting Michigan's Water Resources
 •  DEQ Orders City of Three Rivers to Improve Public Water Supply
 •  DEQ and Michigan Lighthouse Alliance Announce Bottomlands Use Agreement for Offshore Lighthouses
 •  DEQ Director Asks Administrative Law Judge to Further Consider Eagle Rock Issue In Kennecott Mine Contested Case
 •  Water and Wastewater Construction Permits Workshop
 •  Saginaw Bay Coastal Initiative Presentation
 •  Settlement Reached Over Cleanup Costs in South Haven
 •  "Green" Energy Project Officially Unveiled at DEQ's Bay City Office
 •  DEQ Encourages Leaf Burning Alternatives
 •  Mercury Emission Rules Finalized
 •  Port Huron Medical Facility Receives "Green" Loan
 •  Governor Urging Home Radon Testing
 •  DEQ Awards Seven Stimulus Grants for Clean Diesel Activities
 •  Court Upholds Penalty Imposed Upon BP Products North America
 •  Public Information Meeting on Consumers Energy Landfills in Bay County
 •  Public Hearing Announced for Proposed Kennecott Humboldt Mill Permit Applications
 •  Fifth Annual MiCorps Conference to be Held October 26-27

Michigan.gov Home | DEQ_Home | Online Services | Permits | Programs | Site Map | Contact_DEQ
State Web Sites | Privacy Policy | Link Policy | Accessibility Policy | Security Policy | Michigan News | Michigan.gov Survey

Copyright © 2001-2009 State of Michigan