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Waste Not, Want Not
The real estate industry has been under a lot of pressure in recent decades. Industrial, commercial, and residential developers have all struggled to find easily developable tracts of land to develop, especially in densely populated, urban areas. At the same time, many previously developed and thus potentially contaminated sites, also known as brownfields, sit vacant, often in prime real estate areas. Redeveloping brownfields can be beneficial to the owner, the community, and the environment, but pose challenges in making them suitable for development.
Waste Not, Want Not
The real estate industry has been under a lot of pressure in recent decades. Industrial, commercial, and residential developers have all struggled to find easily developable tracts of land to develop, especially in densely populated, urban areas. At the same time, many previously developed and thus potentially contaminated sites, also known as brownfields, sit vacant, often in prime real estate areas. Redeveloping brownfields can be beneficial to the owner, the community, and the environment, but pose challenges in making them suitable for development.
Waste Not, Want Not
Geostrata
Viswanath, Meena (author) / Hunt, Christopher (author) / Bertsch, Devin (author)
GeoStrata Magazine Archive ; 26 ; 42-48
2022-10-01
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
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