|
As part of the process to identify a potential new tenant(s)
for the vacancy at the Moran Redevelopment Project, the City
solicited Letters of Interest and reconvened the Moran Advisory
Group (MAG) to make recommendations to the Mayor on the possible
new tenant(s). After several weeks of public forums (at all five
NPAs and the MAG) there are now two remaining applicants: The
Lake Champlain Maritime Museum and Burlington College.
The MAG has recommended that the City try to accommodate both
the Lake Champlain Maritime Museum and Burlington College into
the Moran redevelopment. If the spatial requirements for all
tenants including current tenants (Ice Factor and the Lake
Champlain Community Sailing Center) and potential tenants cannot
be met, then the matter will return to the MAG for further
recommendations.
The Parks, Arts and Culture Committee of the City Council
will host a full public forum to continue the discussion on
Tuesday, January, 26 at 6:30 pm at the Miller Center (130 Gosse
Court).
The City of Burlington received four Letters of Interest from
organizations interested in occupying up to 7,000 sq.ft. of
ground floor space in the Moran Center at Waterfront Park
redevelopment project.
Here are descriptions of what each organization proposes:
Burlington City Arts: Proposes to use 7,000 sq.ft. to
create an extension of the Firehouse Center for the Visual Arts
with a focus on arts education. BCA would: run classes, camps
and workshops in drawing, painting, photography and digital
media, as well as professional development, design and
merchandising; allow people to drop in and make art in short
format classes; create exhibition space for education and
tourism and rent space for large-scale events; and possibly
manage a small store that would sell work of Vermont artists.
BCA would grow their relationships with area colleges that
currently use their facilities to offer classes for credit. To
view Burlington City Art's Letter of Interest, click
here.

Burlington College: Proposes to use between 4,000 and
7,000 sq.ft. to create a multi-use facility to serve as a
community gallery and public art space for exhibits, dance
workshops, etc.; an event space for lectures, conferences, and
events; and classrooms (including green build and environmental
retrofitting classes). BC would also move (and expand) two
functions to the Moran building: the Institute for Civic
Engagement, which engages citizens in discourse regarding
important issues; and the Pro Se Legal Clinic, which teaches
low-income and disadvantaged Vermonters to manage their own
legal issues. To view Burlington College's Letter of Interest,
click
here.

Flynn Center for the Performing Arts: Proposes to use
approximately 3,000 sq. ft. of indoor space for classes, camps,
and informal performance, plus some outdoor performance area,
perhaps in the fountain/plaza area. Since FCPA is considering
using less than the full space previously allotted to Green
Mountain Children’s Museum, they have raised the possibility of
collaborating with another organization whose mission and
programming would be compatible (specifically mentioning BCA and
LCMM). To view the Flynn Center for the Performing Arts Letter
of Interest, click
here.

Lake Champlain Maritime Museum: Proposes to use 7,000
sq ft. to create a new LCMM branch called the "Shipwreck
Center," which will include interactive museum exhibits and
theater space inside the building, focusing on the shipwrecks of
Lake Champlain. The exhibits would include recovered artifacts,
full-sized replica vessels and other objects that tell the story
of the Lake's military, commercial and cultural history. LCMM
also proposes to relocate to Moran the activities currently
housed at Perkins Pier, including porting the schooner Lois
McClure and the Burlington Community and Youth Rowing project.
To view the Lake Champlain Maritime Museum's Letter of Interest,
click
here.

To: All
Interested Agencies, Groups, and Individuals
This is to give
notice that the City of Burlington Vermont (“the City”) has
conducted an evaluation as required by Executive Order 11988 and
11990, in accordance with HUD regulations at 24 CFR 55.20
Subpart C Procedures for Making Determinations on Floodplain
Management, to determine the potential affect that its activity
in the floodplain and wetland will have on the human environment
for the Brownfields Economic Development Initiative Program
under grant #B-09-BD-50-8013.
The City is
planning to use a Brownfields Economic Development Initiative
Grant and an associated Section 108 loan from the U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban Development (“HUD”) for the
Moran Center redevelopment project, located at 475 Lake Street
in Burlington, Vermont. A portion of the total 4-acre Moran
parcel proposed for redevelopment includes a 1.008-acre area
within the 100-year floodplain, and impacts a .5-acre portion
of a wetland. The impacted part of the site is to be renovated
into a boat storage area for the Lake Champlain Community
Sailing Center. This will involve the mitigation of brownfields
issues, creation of a storm water filtration system, and the
installation of permanent erosion control. The entire site is
comprised of fill material, dating back to the 1800’s. The
wetland was created as a result of the construction of an
earthen containment berm that surrounded a bulk petroleum tank.
Soils within the wetland have been impacted by coal storage,
petroleum, contamination, and compaction, preventing the
effective filtration of storm water.
This notice with
a request for comment was mailed to the regional office of the
Federal Emergency Management Agency and the Vermont Agency of
Natural Resources.
Additional
information, including full copies of all reports and studies
completed to date, may be obtained by contacting: Nick Warner,
CEDO Special Projects Manager (802) 865-7173 or
nwarner@ci.burlington.vt.us.
Written comments
must be received by the City at the following address on or
before Monday, January 25, 2010: Burlington CEDO, 149 Church
St., Room 32 City Hall, Burlington VT 05401, Attn: Nick Warner,
during the hours of 8:30 AM to 4:30 PM. Comments may also be
submitted via email at nwarner@ci.burlington.vt.us.
On December 14, the Moran development team presented to the City
Council a financing plan for the Moran project, during a special
two-hour Council work session. While the plan will continue to
evolve over time, the major components are now established.
Importantly, the City’s share of the Moran project is financed
with no increases in property tax rates.
The presentation of a financing plan is a major step towards
realizing the goals of the Moran project: revitalizing the north
end of the downtown waterfront, renovating a derelict public
building that has sat vacant for 23 years, creating significant
numbers of new jobs and new revenues for the City, and
establishing a year-round recreational and educational
attraction that will enhance quality of life as well as the
economic vitality of the area. To view the financing plan,
click
here.
The City of Burlington is seeking Letters of Interest from
for-profit and non-profit businesses interested in occupying up
to 7,000 sq.ft. of ground floor space in the Moran Center at
Waterfront Park redevelopment project. The project will create
commercial spaces in a completely renovated building that will
be leased to non-profit and for-profit businesses. The fee-based
uses will be balanced with year-round public access to an
observation deck overlooking the lake, public restrooms, a
community room, and public park space that includes a splash
area and new skate park. The deadline for submitting Letters of
Interest is 2:00 PM (EST) on December 18, 2009. To view
the Request for Letters of Interest, click
here.

The Green Mountain Children’s Museum (GMCM) informed the City
of Burlington that it is withdrawing as a partner from the
process of redeveloping the Moran Plant. Burlington Mayor Bob
Kiss issued the following statement about GMCM’s decision:
“While we are disappointed that the Children’s Museum has
decided it can no longer participate in the redevelopment of
Moran, we appreciate all their hard work and the cooperative
relationship that we enjoyed with them throughout our mutual
efforts on this Project. I firmly support the GMCM mission of
establishing Vermont’s first children’s museum, whether at Moran
or elsewhere. We are on good terms and I wish them success in
ultimately making their vision a reality somewhere in
Burlington.
Moran continues to be an exciting project that will
revitalize the Waterfront, foster local economic development,
and bring significant community benefits to the residents of
Burlington. The Moran Project has progressed to a stage which
will very soon require formal commitments from the City and the
tenants through the execution of final development agreements.
It is clear that the economy is causing all of the partners to
sharpen their pencils as this Project moves forward. This is the
responsible thing for each party to do. I respect GMCM’s
decision that the project no longer meets their long term goals.
From the City’s perspective, major steps accomplished in the
past few months provide more confidence than ever before that
the Moran Project is financially viable. Over the last several
months the City has secured or identified funding from a variety
of sources that do not impact local taxpayers which will allow
the City to meet its commitments to redeveloping Moran. GMCM
leaving the project will not impact these funding solutions. The
City is enthusiastic about its partnerships with the Lake
Champlain Community Sailing Center and Ice Factor. As soon as
possible the City will issue a Request For Proposals for a third
tenant to replace GMCM.
CEDO is already scheduled to meet with the Board of Finance
on November 16 to discuss the City’s financing plans. As always,
the administration will work closely with the Burlington City
Council , the Board of Finance and the Parks, Arts and Culture
Committee in order to move the Moran Project forward.”
David G. White of White + Burke Real Estate Investment
Advisors, who is working with the City’s Community and Economic
Development Office to assist in developing the project, is also
optimistic about the project’s future.
“I have worked closely
with all the tenants and the City on the details of this
project. While it is disappointing that GMCM has decided it can
no longer participate, this in no way affects the viability of
the project. Real estate development is intrinsically complex
and there are always bumps in the road. This project is no
different. The space GMCM would have used is wonderfully
attractive and will be appealing to other potential users. I’m
confident we will find a suitable replacement tenant. The
importance of the City’s ability to fulfill its share of project
financing represents a level of progress that cannot be
overstated. This is a viable project that has a substantial
basis for moving forward.”
You can read the press release issued by the Green Mountain
Children's Museum here
(pdf).
To view this update in a printable PDF format, click
here. For the printable version, you will need
Adobe
Acrobat Reader. If you do not have a current copy of this free
software, you can download
it now.
New Building & Site Designs Released - Revised Cost
Estimates Come in Just Below Original Figures
In October 2008, the acclaimed architecture firm Freeman
French Freeman (FFF) was hired in a competitive process to
provide architectural and engineering services for the Moran
project. Earlier this summer FFF finished the first phase of
that work—schematic design.
| Working closely with the City and project tenants, FFF has
unveiled innovative revised designs for the building and the
site. The new design makes maximum use of the available space,
retains the character of the building, and adds attractive
details to the structure.
Similarly, the new site design balances the programming needs
of the City and tenants, engineering constraints associated with
the filled lands, environmental conditions, stormwater
requirements, etc. |
|
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| |
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Aerial View Looking Northwest |
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The site design features a relocated and expanded skate park,
a winter ice skating rink that will double as a summertime
splash/spray area, an outdoor terrace for the Children’s Museum,
a boat storage yard for the Sailing Center, and many pedestrian
friendly amenities including a promenade along the waterfront.
|
|
Aerial View Detail Looking
Northwest |
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One of the goals of the schematic phase was to incorporate
“green” elements in the design of both the building and site.
Earlier in the year, Moran was selected as one of just sixteen
projects in the country for an EPA Sustainability Pilot Award,
which funded a national consulting firm to come to Burlington
and work with the City and FFF to assess the feasibility of
incorporating energy and resource efficient design and
operation. Innovative stormwater treatments, a green roof,
on-site renewable energy production, using deep lake water for
cooling, and pursuing Leadership in Energy and Environmental
Design (LEED) certification are among the many sustainable
design elements being considered.
| Another aspect of the schematic phase was the preparation of
revised construction estimates. FFF hired DEW Construction Corp
to review the building and site designs and provide new
construction estimates. CEDO now estimates the total project
cost at $20.6 million; slightly below the estimate of $21.8
million made public before the March 2008 vote. Those figures
will likely change as the project further evolves. At the same
time, the City will also continue to look for cost savings. |
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|
Aerial View Looking Northeast |
With the schematic phase complete, the City Council approved
extending FFF’s contract in July to include the next phase of
architectural services: “design development.” This phase will
further refine the designs, provide information necessary for
permitting, and bring the project to the point of preparing
construction documents.
 |
|
FFF’s design and development work will include preparing a
full set of drawings and specifications that will flush out all
technical, code, and systems challenges for the building and
site. It will also include three dimensional renderings, energy
modeling, geotechnical testing, and further development of the
LEED certification process. |
|
Aerial View Looking Southeast |
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City Secures $3 Million Federal Financing Package - $1
Million Grant Will be Paired with $2 Million Loan
In August the City learned that the Moran project will
receive a $1 million grant through the Brownfields Economic
Development Initiative (BEDI), one of just seven projects chosen
nationally under this highly competitive US Department of
Housing and Urban Development (HUD) program.
BEDI grants promote the redevelopment of abandoned industrial
sites with environmental contamination (see update on page 3
regarding the clean-up). However, BEDI funds are not limited to
paying for environmental clean-up; they can be used for the
general costs of redeveloping “brownfields” such as Moran.
BEDI grant funds must be used in conjunction with a “Section
108” loan, which is a financing tool for cities to invest in
economic development projects. In August, HUD also gave
preliminary approval for a $2 million federally guaranteed
Section 108 loan. Together, the BEDI grant and the Section 108
loan are a significant portion of the City’s share of the Moran
project.
The City Council approved submitting the Section 108 loan
application with the expectation that revenues from the City’s
tax increment financing (TIF) district would cover the debt
payments. Burlington has had a waterfront TIF district since
1996, but its authority to finance new public projects expired
in 2006. This past May, Burlington successfully lobbied the
General Assembly to include a provision in the Vermont Recovery
and Reinvestment Act allowing the City to finance new projects
for five years beginning January 2010. In September, the
legislative Joint Fiscal Committee gave final approval to the
City’s plan, reestablishing an important economic development
tool and putting in place a vital piece of the $3 million HUD
package.
Tax Increment Financing
TIF is not new to Burlington. It simply directs new tax
revenues from new development within the TIF district to pay for
public projects. When the debt is paid off, the taxes go to the
City’s general fund and to the state education fund.
Burlington has utilized TIF to help finance six public
projects, including rebuilding Lake Street, acquiring the Urban
Reserve, and building the Lakeview parking garage and the public
fishing pier. These public projects have leveraged tens of
millions of dollars of private investment (which creates the new
tax revenues to pay off the debt), including affordable and
market rate housing, the Lake & College development, Filene’s
(Macy’s), the rehabilitation of the Burlington Town Center mall,
and construction of the Marriott Hotel.
Meanwhile, developer David G. White (see article, page 4) and
CEDO staff are exploring additional funding sources for the
Moran project, including state and federal grants and New
Markets Tax Credits, which is a federal tax incentive to attract
private investment in economic development projects in eligible
areas.
Waterfront North Project Update
Closely associated with the Moran project, “Waterfront North”
is part of the ongoing effort to put in place public
infrastructure to reclaim Burlington’s formerly industrial
waterfront in a manner that both enhances public access to the
Lake Champlain shoreline and drives the regional economy.
Phase I of the Waterfront North project will realign and
extend the end of Lake Street, which degrades into a dirt road
before the Moran property. Parking will be consolidated and
expanded in an existing surface lot, with additional on-street
parking created along Lake Street (previous plans for a parking
garage have been dropped). A portion of the bike path will also
be realigned and widened, to minimize bike-vehicular-pedestrian
conflicts. Innovative on-site stormwater treatments will be used
to protect Lake Champlain water quality.
Future phases of Waterfront North will include improvements
to Depot Street and construction of pedestrian stairs on the
slope between Battery and Lake Streets.
The planning and design of Waterfront North have been funded
through an appropriation earmark secured by Senator Patrick
Leahy. Additional funding applications are pending with the US
Department of Transportation, Vermont Agency of Transportation,
and US Economic Development Administration.
More information is available at:
www.cedoburlington.org/.
First Phase of Environmental Remediation Complete - City
Secures State and Federal Grants to Stabilize and Clean Up
Interior of Building
Although Burlington Electric Department did an excellent job
decommissioning the coal-fired Moran electric generating plant
in 1986, some environmental contamination remains in and around
the building. One of the benefits of the Moran redevelopment is
that it will result in the comprehensive clean-up of the site,
and the property will be put back into productive use for the
citizens of Burlington.
Dating back several years—and utilizing almost $65,000 of
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency grant money—the City has
extensively documented the nature of the contamination (full
reports are available at
www.cedoburlington.org/waterfront/moran_plant/site_data).
Thankfully, all assessments to date have ruled out PCB
contamination.
Last year, CEDO secured $105,000 from the Chittenden County
Regional Planning Commission for additional assessment and
stabilization activities, including the construction this past
winter of underwater dams in the intake and outflow sluiceways,
to permanently separate the building from Lake Champlain. The
CCRPC funds also paid for creating a “corrective action plan”
and cost estimate for cleaning up the site.
Based on that plan, this past April the Vermont Department of
Environmental Conservation (DEC) awarded the Moran project a
$100,000 grant to begin cleaning up the inside of the building.
That work—which was completed just last week—included removing
the remaining asbestos from the building, stabilizing lead-based
paint, removing more than seven tons of pigeon guano, and
pumping residual water from the basement. This brings the
building interior to the point where construction can begin.
Exterior clean-up, which will mostly involve removing or
capping shallow soil contaminants, will be dealt with during
redevelopment of the site. In the meantime, the City continues
to work cooperatively with the EPA and Vermont DEC to monitor
the property to protect public heath and safety.
Development Consultant Hired
This past March CEDO issued a Request for Qualifications to
provide development services for the Moran project. From the
proposals received, CEDO selected White+ Burke Real Estate
Investment Advisors (www.whiteandburke.com).
White+Burke principal David White brings 30 years’ experience
with complex projects and public-private partnerships. Of note,
David was Vice-President of Pomerleau Real Estate, Director of
the Montpelier Community Development Agency, and coordinated the
permit process for the redevelopment of Fletcher Allen’s main
campus.
White+Burke will help CEDO evaluate financing strategies,
particularly regarding the City’s share of the project. W+B will
also prepare development and operating budgets and help
negotiate cost allocation and other issues with the tenants.
David White and his staff have already become indispensable
members of the development team and are helping move the Moran
project from concept to reality.
Negotiations Continue with Tenants
Since the March 2008 advisory referendum, CEDO has continued
to meet regularly with the three tenants who will occupy the
renovated Moran building—Green Mountain Children’s Museum, Lake
Champlain Community Sailing Center, and Ice Factor.
Last October, the City signed pre-development Memoranda of
Understanding with each of the tenants – agreements which begin
to outline the respective roles and responsibilities of each
organization in the development process. Now that there are
revised designs and refined cost estimates, the City has begun
to negotiate details such as allocation of costs, lease terms,
etc. This work will lead to development agreements with each of
the tenants.
The structure of the project has not changed: the Children’s
Museum will be a community resource for children and their
caregivers – geared to children under eight years of age, it
will be a safe and welcoming environment where children can
learn through hands-on exploration, creativity and play. The
Community Sailing Center—which provides educational and
recreational access to Lake Champlain regardless of age, ability
or income— will expand into a year-round operation, with
capacity to serve twice the number of users. Ice Factor will
build a family adventure center featuring ice and rock climbing,
a café, restaurant, and outdoor seasonal ice skating. The Parks
and Recreation Department will operate a summer splash area, a
newly expanded skateboard park, and a public observation deck on
the fourth floor of the building.
A Message From the Mayor
In October 2007, the City released a proposal to redevelop
the former J.E. Moran electric generating station on
Burlington’s waterfront. Developed with extensive public
participation, the proposal calls for the site’s redevelopment
as a four-season, multi-use community facility which will be
leased to two nonprofits—Green Mountain Children’s Museum and
Lake Champlain Community Sailing Center—and the family adventure
center, Ice Factor. In March 2008 the proposal was put before
the voters in an advisory referendum; with more than 65% voting
in favor. This update describes some of the significant progress
made since the referendum. The project continues to be a unique
opportunity to revitalize and anchor the north end of the
waterfront, create new educational and recreational
opportunities for residents and visitors, generate new revenues
and create new jobs, and enhance year-round activity on the
waterfront. I invite you to learn more about the project by
visiting the Community and Economic Development Office at City
Hall (third floor), calling 865-7144, or visiting
www.cedoburlington.org.
 |
| Bob Kiss, Mayor |
Burlington Awarded Major Economic
Development Grant for Moran Project
Redevelopment Project Receives $3 Million in Financing
Through Highly Competitive Federal Program
Burlington, VT - August 20, 2009. The City of Burlington
announced today that it has been awarded a $1 million grant from
the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) for
the redevelopment of the decommissioned Moran Plant on
Burlington’s Waterfront. The highly competitive grant is one of
a handful of awards through HUD’s Brownfields Economic
Development Initiative (BEDI) program - which, for the 2009
application process, offered a total of $20 million in grant
funding for applicants competing from all over the country. The BEDI grant was awarded in conjunction with HUD approval of the
City’s application for a HUD Section 108 guaranteed loan for $2
million, resulting in a total of $3 million in financial support
for the Moran Project.
BEDI grants promote economic and community development
through the redevelopment of abandoned industrial and commercial
facilities where potential environmental contamination poses a
challenge to redevelopment. In particular, the BEDI program
emphasizes the redevelopment of brownfields sites and the
creation of economic opportunities for low-and moderate-income
people, the creation or retention of businesses and jobs, and
enhancement of the local tax base.
BEDI grants must be accompanied by a HUD Section 108
guaranteed loan application as a match for the grant funding.
Section 108 is a Federally-backed financing tool for public
investments in local economic development, housing
rehabilitation, and public facilities. The Burlington City
Council, which authorized the Section 108 loan and BEDI grant
applications, must also authorize acceptance of the grant
funding and execution of the Section 108 financing.
Burlington Mayor Bob Kiss stressed the significance of the
Moran project and the grant award. “The Moran project has great
economic and community development potential for the City and
residents, and is important to our efforts to enhance and
revitalize the Waterfront and downtown,” said Mayor Kiss. “The
redevelopment of Moran received wide public support on Town
Meeting Day in 2008, and we’re very pleased that HUD also
recognizes its merits. The BEDI grant award is a major step
forward for the project.”
The Moran Plant was decommissioned and transferred from the
Burlington Electric Department to the City of Burlington in
1986. The building and site lie on the north end of Burlington’s
Waterfront, yards away from the shores of Lake Champlain. The
site has long been viewed as having tremendous economic and
community development potential.
The Moran Redevelopment Project is a public-private
partnership to redevelop the blighted industrial property,
create new public park space, provide educational and
recreational opportunities for residents and visitors. The City
has signed predevelopment agreements for the project with three
tenants: the Lake Champlain Community Sailing Center, the Green
Mountain Children’s Museum, and Ice Factor, a family adventure
center with rock and ice climbing, outdoor seasonal ice skating
rink, café and restaurant.
On Town Meeting Day, March 4, 2008, Burlington voters were
asked in an advisory question whether the City should move
forward with the Moran Redevelopment Project. Sixty-five percent
of Burlington voters were in favor of moving forward with the
plan. Since then, the project has moved forward on several
fronts, including a base structural assessment of the building,
environmental review and clean-up, construction of sluiceway
dams to permanently separate the building from the lake and pump
residual water out of the basement, the initial phase of
architectural and engineering work, planning work for the
closely related Waterfront Access North Project, along with the
predevelopment agreements signed with the three tenants. In
April, the project received a $100,000 grant from the Vermont
Department of Environmental Conservation for environmental
remediation.

Moran Project Receives $100,000 Grant from the State of Vermont
for Environmental Remediation
Burlington, VT - April 9, 2009. Governor Jim Douglas
announced today that the Moran project on Burlington’s
waterfront will receive a $100,000 grant to begin the process of
cleaning-up environmental contamination at the site. Mayor Bob
Kiss said that the grant, which was awarded by the Brownfield
Reuse Program at the Vermont Department of Environmental
Conservation (DEC), is an important step towards the
redevelopment of the former coal-fired electric generating
plant.
“The environmental clean-up of Moran is one of the benefits
of the Moran redevelopment project,” Kiss said. “Over the past
few years the City has done considerable work to understand the
environmental conditions at the Moran site, and we are excited
to have the resources to begin cleaning it up. This is an
important step towards putting this valuable public asset on the
shores of Lake Champlain back into productive use.”
In the official announcement of the grant award, Governor
Douglas also stressed the significance of brownfields
redevelopment: “Redevelopment of brownfields properties
stimulates local economy by getting unproductive properties back
on the tax rolls, strengthening downtowns and creating jobs."
The DEC grant will pay for the removal of debris and
sediments inside the former electric generating station that was
constructed by the Burlington Electric Department in 1953, and
decommissioned in 1986. Earlier this year, a separate
brownfields grant secured through the Chittenden County Regional
Planning Commission paid to permanently close the “sluiceways”
that used to bring lake water into and out of the Moran building
as part of the electric generating process.
Concurrent with this work, the internationally recognized
architecture firm of Freeman French Freeman is well into the
process of refining the design of the “Moran Center at
Waterfront Park” project. This public-private partnership will
redevelop the blighted industrial property, create new public
park space, provide educational and recreational opportunities
for residents and visitors, and have a significant impact on the
regional economy. The City has signed predevelopment agreements
with three tenants: the Lake Champlain Community Sailing Center,
the Green Mountain Children’s Museum, and Ice Factor, a family
adventure center with rock and ice climbing, outdoor seasonal
ice skating rink, café and restaurant.
City Council Approves Additional Funds for Site Design
At their March 30th meeting, the Burlington City Council
approved $46,000 in additional funds to design, engineer and
estimate the costs of improvements to the site around the Moran
Center. The previous contract with the architecture firm of
Freeman, French and Freeman only covered the building itself.
The additional scope of work will now cover the entire site,
which is necessary to complete the process of refining the
project design.

Recent progress on the Moran project includes:
-
Design team begins work: The acclaimed
architecture firm of Freeman, French, Freeman was selected
in an open competitive process for the first phase of
architectural and engineering work at Moran. FFF is working
closely with the City and the project partners to produce
schematic drawings and more detailed and reliable
construction cost estimates for the building, which should
be complete by the end of March.
-
Moran Users Group continues to meet: CEDO, Green
Mountain Children’s Museum, Lake Champlain Sailing Center,
Ice Factor, and the Department of Parks and Recreation, have
continued to meet to refine respective programming needs.
The partners have also each met individually with the design
team led by Freeman, French, Freeman, and there have been
several group meetings with the team as well.
|

Contractors and City Staff review underwater images of
the sluiceways |
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Assistance received from Chittenden County Regional
Planning Commission: A successful application to CCRPC’s
Brownfield’s Initiative has resulted in over $100,000 worth
of services for the Moran project. The work (described
below) has been performed or overseen by the consulting
firms of KAS Consulting and Waite Environmental Management (WEM).
-
Sluiceways dams constructed: The Moran building
was built with intake and outflow sluiceways to utilize lake
water to cool the former power plant. When the plant was
decommissioned, the sluiceway gates were left open and the
sump pumps removed, allowing water from Lake Champlain to
flow freely into and out of the basement. The general
contracting firm of Engineers Construction Inc. has
completed construction of underwater dams to close-off the
sluiceways and permanently separate the building from the
lake. This will allow us to pump out the residual water in
the spring and remove debris from the building. Paid for
under the CCRPC grant.
|

Mini sub or ROV documents underwater images of
sluiceways prior to closure. |
- Additional environmental assessment,
monitoring and stabilization: Utilizing
resources from Burlington’s EPA brownfields grant,
and more recently, CCRPC, work has continued in
coordination with VT DEC to better understand the
environmental conditions in and around the Moran
building. This has included testing the lake water
outside the building, ongoing groundwater
monitoring, testing of water and sediments in the
basement, etc.
- Waterfront Access North moves forward:
CEDO has coordinated closely with the
Waterfront Access North project, which will
result in nearly a million dollars of transportation infrastructure improvements
in the general area of the Moran project for
improvements to lower Lake Street. A
draft scoping study (pdf) is complete and under
review by staff; recommendations for a preferred
design have been prepared for the Waterfront
Marketplace Downtown advisory group.
|

Engineers Construction Inc. pumping concrete into Moran
to create the new sluiceway dams that separate the
building from the lake. |
- Resources sought for environmental clean-up:
A revised scope of work and clean-up budget estimate
have been developed for environmental remediation of
the site, and a corrective action plan is being
prepared for DEC review and approval (paid for the
CCRPC grant). CEDO has submitted an application to
DEC to pay for the clean-up the interior of the
building, and is exploring other funding
possibilities, including HUD’s Brownfields Economic
Development Initiative, EPA Clean-up grants, and
others.
- Survey completed: A property
boundary survey and detailed topographic survey
(including right-of-ways, contours, utilities, etc.)
of the Moran plant parcel and the surrounding area
has just been completed by Lamoureux & Dickinson
Consulting Engineers. Paid for under the CCRPC
grant.
- Full Structural Base Report: The
structural
engineering assessment of the existing base level
is available in pdf format.
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Burlington Mayor Bob Kiss and representatives of
Ice Factor, the Community Sailing Center and the
Green Mountain Children’s Museum publicly sign
Memoranda of Understanding (MOUs) for the Moran
Redevelopment Project. |

- MOU's and First Phase Funding Approved: At its October 20 meeting, the City Council
unanimously approved two significant aspects of the project.
Finalized Memoranda of Understanding (MOUs) were approved for
each of the project partners - the Lake Champlain Sailing
Center, Green Mountain Children’s Museum, and Ice Factor, Inc.
And, $164,533 in funding was appropriated for a first phase of
architectural and engineering work which will give the City and
project partners more detailed and reliable cost estimates for
the plan. These cost estimates are anticipated within 3 to 4
months, during which time the City and its partners will work on
detailed development agreements to implement the project. Like
the MOUs, the development agreements are subject to City Council
approval.

- Moran Receives EPA Grant: The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has selected the
Moran Center as one of just 16 projects nationally for a Brownfields
Sustainability Pilot program award. This new EPA effort provides
communities with technical assistance to help achieve greener
assessment, cleanup, and redevelopment of so-called “brownfields”
sites, where redevelopment is complicated by the presence of
environmental contamination due to the sites’ industrial past. The
technical assistance will be used to assess the feasibility of
implementing the "green building" aspects of the Moran project,
including the potential for on-site renewable energy production,
energy and water conservation, innovative stormwater treatment
techniques, and ecological enhancements at the site. The complete
EPA press release is available
here.
- Structural Analysis of Moran Building: Engineering Ventures, a structural engineering firm hired by the
City to assess the structural integrity of the Moran building, has
found "the condition of the reinforced concrete material of the
building’s base structure is essentially at or near its so-called
original, as-built design capacity and use." These findings clear up
any questions regarding the building’s structural capacity for
redevelopment. A copy of the preliminary findings is available
here.
A full report will be available soon from CEDO.
- Pre-Development Agreement with Children’s Museum: Following on the Burlington City Council’s approval last month of
a predevelopment “Memorandum of Understanding” (MOU) between the
City and the Lake Champlain Community Sailing Center, a similar MOU
between the Green Mountain Children’s Museum and the City will be
presented to the Board of Finance on Monday, September 8, in
Conference Room 12, City Hall.
- Electric Sub-station and Transmission Lines to be Moved:
The September 9th primary day ballot item regarding the East
Avenue Loop transmission upgrade project includes components that
will indirectly benefit the Moran project as well as the waterfront
in general. Specifically, the Burlington Electric Department
substation currently located on Lake Street in front of the old
Moran Plant will be relocated to the McNeil Plant, and above ground
BED electric distribution lines will be removed or under-grounded.
The new underlying transmission system will allow Green Mountain
Power (GMP) to remove its waterfront lines in the next phase of this
project. The cost of the BED project will be covered by the bond
that the voters overwhelmingly passed in March 2008.

Community Sailing Center (CSC)
As we move forward to renovate the Moran Building itself, the
Community Sailing Center (CSC) moved out of the building and into an
adjacent location. This move required an amendment of the CSC’s
lease with the City. On June 9 the City Council approved the lease
amendment.
The only change to the lease is the particular area leased to the
CSC. The storage yard has been reconfigured to provide a secure
staging area and access to the building for City contractors. The
office and classroom space has been moved into an unused shed and
garage bay at the water department. The CSC will supplement the
classroom space with a trailer or tent to be located next to the
shed.
| The CSC has seen a threefold increase in their programs
since the March 4 vote. The CSC held a successful fundraiser
on July 3rd in conjunction with the fireworks to raise
additional funds for their scholarship programs.
Additionally, at the end of June the CSC successfully
re-floated their expanded and improved atlas dock system. |
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-
Development Agreements: CEDO has been meeting with the prospective tenants to develop
Memoranda of Understanding (MOUs) that will guide us through the
preliminary development process. The MOUs generally lay out the
concepts as presented in the “Guide to the Redevelopment of the
Moran Plant.” The MOU’s provide the initial framework for the final
development agreements. The MOU’s with the Green Mountain Children’s Museum (GMCM) and
CSC will come to the City Council as soon as possible to facilitate
the progression of their capital campaigns. The City is currently
negotiating with Ice Factor. The Parks, Arts and Culture Committee (PACC)
and Community Development Committee (CDC) provided feedback, and the
Finance Board and City Council will authorize the execution of both
the MOUs and the future Development Agreements.
-
Consulting Services:
-
Environmental Remediation: The City is
conducting additional environmental testing to aid in the
development of interim interior clean-up plan and dewatering plan
for basement. This is funded through the City’s existing EPA
Brownfield program.
-
Site Survey: The City will soon contract with
surveyor to clarify boundaries and right-of-way along with providing
base information needed for redevelopment.
-
Foundation Investigation and Report: CEDO
solicited Engineering Ventures to develop a proposal for testing the
foundation at Moran and certifying the structure. They have provided
the City with a proposal to conduct an investigation of the
foundation using inspection, concrete cores and testing to provide a
report.
The City executed a contract with Engineering Ventures to conduct
the structural analysis. The core sampling took place on July 8, and
we hope to have the results of laboratory tests on those samples in
mid- August.
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Taking the core samples on July 8 (left)
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First concrete core sample (above)
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- Equinox Sculpture Repurposing Process: The
granite blocks currently located north of the Moran Plant
cannot be accommodated in their current location as part of
the Moran Center proposal. CEDO has begun discussions with
Burlington City Arts and Parks Department to outline a
process for this issue.
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- Technical Corrections: Zoning: In the Zoning rewrite process, the boundary lines
for the Urban Reserve and Downtown Waterfront – Public Trust
districts were incorrectly shown on the zoning maps. The new zoning
map incorrectly drew the boundary along an existing parcel line and
not as intended on the boundary of the Interim Development Area.
This is a technical correction that the Planning Commission has
already taken action to correct along with some other minor
technical corrections by holding a public hearing on June 10, 2008.
The City Council will hold a public hearing on this item.
| Burlington Comprehensive Development
Ordinance p. 14 |
| ZA-08-03 re: Misc. Amendments and
Corrections |
| |
2. |
Correct southern Urban Reserve boundary
(as depicted on Maps 4.2.2-1, 4.3.1-1, 4.4.1-1, 4.4.7-1; and
Sec. 4.5.4 (b)1A) to be northern property line of Interim
Development Area for conform to City Master Plan.
|
| Sec. 4.5.4 Natural Resource Protection
Overlay (NR) District (b) Areas Affected |
| This overlay district includes all areas
delineated on Map 4.5.4-1-Natural Resources Protection
Overlay (NR) District and is divided into four (4) subparts:
|
| |
1. |
A Riparian and Littoral Conservation Zone
which consists of all surface water and a corresponding
upland buffer area, and specifically includes the following
areas: |
| |
|
A. |
Uplands within 250 feet of the Lake Champlain lakeshore
(measured at 100-feet above mean sea level) with the
exception of that portion of the shoreline between the
northern extent of the Interim Development Area
north of the former Moran Generating Station and the
most westerly extent of Roundhouse Point described as the
“Urban Waterfront” in the 2000 Open Space Protection Plan;
(new language includes the word "extent" after the word
northern and the words "Interim Development Area north of
the" after the words northern extent of the...) |
- Transportation & Infrastructure: Waterfront Access North Transportation Improvement Project:
The project is a "scoping" project, which means it is setting out to
develop alternatives for addressing transportation issues, problems,
and opportunities within the project area. See map at:
http://www.cedoburlington.org/waterfront/Waterfront_North-Issues_Map%20070308.pdf.
The City held two local concerns meetings on July 10, 2008 at
Burlington College. CEDO and DPW are working with Resource
Systems Group on the Waterfront Access North Transportation
Improvement Project. This is the second phase of a larger waterfront
design project, the first phase of which is located proximate to
lower College Street.

The City of Burlington and its
partners have started work on the Moran Plant redevelopment project
approved by voters by a wide margin on Town Meeting Day. Earlier
this week, City staff from the Community and Economic Development
Office and Parks and Recreation Department and Burlington Mayor Bob
Kiss met with the Lake Champlain Community Sailing Center, Green
Mountain Children’s Museum, and Ice Factor, the three tenants for
the project
On March 4, 2008, as outlined in an advisory question, Burlington
voters were asked whether they wanted to move forward with the
proposal - and, 65 percent voted in favor. The plan was developed
after an extensive public process to solicit feedback and comment
from residents, including a Town Meeting Day poll in 2006, numerous
open houses and public informational meetings, presentations to all
five of the Ward NPAs, and the establishment of a citizen-driven
Moran Advisory Group.
Mayor Kiss expressed his appreciation for the public’s support
and the importance of moving forward from this point: “I’m pleased
that there is such clear support for redeveloping Moran in a way
that will bring substantial community and economic benefits to
Burlington and the region. I especially appreciate the hard work
that went into the proposal by, among others, the proposed tenants,
City staff, the City Council, and Burlington residents. Our task now
is to begin the work on the details that will make this project a
reality.”
With a public vote now in favor of the plan, the City and its
partners have started taking the next steps towards achieving the
development project. This includes legal agreements between the City
and partners, additional architectural and engineering services,
addressing City financing and fundraising campaigns by the Community
Sailing Center and Green Mountain Children’s Museum.
Elements of the finalized project, such as the development and
lease agreements, will require approval by the City’s Board of
Finance and the City Council. The project will also need to go
through an extensive permitting process administered by the City’s
Planning and Zoning department.
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