Brownfields Redevelopment

Why Should I Care about Brownfields?

A brownfield typically is a commercial or industrial property that is vacant, abandoned, or underutilized and may be impacted by hazardous substances, pollutants, or other contaminants. 

Focusing on brownfields properties can address many community needs at once.

Redevelopment Process and Resources

Site Identification and Inventory

For communities and developers wanting to focus on brownfields as a community development strategy. 

Communities should get started with two basic activities:

Knowing your community needs, your brownfields sites and those sites’ characteristics can prepare you for ​development opportunities and spark ideas.
PADD can assist in facilitating a community brownfields workshop or education to get your brownfields initiative rolling.

Regional Inventory

PADD and 15 of its communities recently completed brownfields inventories identifying 217 brownfield sites across the region.

Communities with brownfield inventories:

Contact Amy or representatives from these communities for more information about sites and this project. Project was funded via a grant from the ATSDR (Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry).

Environmental Site Assessments

For buyers, sellers, and communities needing more information and data about the potential contamination of a particular property.

Environmental Site Assessments answer the folowing questions:

Benefits to buyers:

Benefits to sellers:

Resources for Brownfield ESAs

Units of local government may apply for free site assessments from NDEQ (Neb. Dept. of Environmental Quality) or EPA. If you are a private entity, but the redevelopment of the property is in the interest of your community, your local government or PADD can apply for a free site assessment of your property from NDEQ or EPA. You will need to grant access to your property via a written agreement.

Clean-up and Redevelopment

For projects which have a known presence and quantity of contamination.

Clean-up and redevelopment projects must have an end use established. Grant and financing resources for contamination clean-up and redevelopment are available but depend on the end use.

​EPA, NDEQ (Neb. Dept. of Environmental Quality), and others have some resources for clean-up. PADD hosts a small fund for no or low-interest loans for eligible clean-up activities. NDEQ’s Voluntary Clean-up Program (VCP) is a streamlined, results-based approach to site-specific clean-up designed to be more flexible than traditional clean-up programs. Property owners can contact DEQ for more information to ensure sites are cleaned-up with an assurance of no further needed action.