Polluted and Dangerous: America's Worst Abandoned Properties and What Can Be Done About Them

Blighted, contaminated, and abandoned property mars nearly every major American city. Justin Hollander conducted primary research in twenty urban centers containing such “brownfields” or, in the most serious cases, “HI-TOADS” (High-Impact Temporarily Obsolete Abandoned Derelict Sites). His goal was to study the sites and the official handling of them through the lenses of sustainability, urban planning, redevelopment, and environmental justice. In Polluted and Dangerous, he scrutinizes specific sites in five of the affected cities: New Bedford, Massachusetts; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Richmond, Virginia; Trenton, New Jersey; and Youngstown, Ohio. Hollander poses the serious questions that local planners face when dealing with issues related to HI-TOADS. For instance, to what degree do planners recognize and acknowledge the problems? Do they see intervention as necessary, and, if so, to whom do they assign the responsibility for it? What measures are undertaken, and how successful are these? In his timely, topical study, Hollander lists common implications of living with and rehabilitating HI-TOADS, and he puts forward specific policy recommendations for redressing the critical issues that are raised. At a time when we are ever more concerned with the intersection of the built and natural environments, this book is not to be missed.

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Polluted and Dangerous: America's Worst Abandoned Properties and What Can Be Done About Them

Blighted, contaminated, and abandoned property mars nearly every major American city. Justin Hollander conducted primary research in twenty urban centers containing such “brownfields” or, in the most serious cases, “HI-TOADS” (High-Impact Temporarily Obsolete Abandoned Derelict Sites). His goal was to study the sites and the official handling of them through the lenses of sustainability, urban planning, redevelopment, and environmental justice. In Polluted and Dangerous, he scrutinizes specific sites in five of the affected cities: New Bedford, Massachusetts; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Richmond, Virginia; Trenton, New Jersey; and Youngstown, Ohio. Hollander poses the serious questions that local planners face when dealing with issues related to HI-TOADS. For instance, to what degree do planners recognize and acknowledge the problems? Do they see intervention as necessary, and, if so, to whom do they assign the responsibility for it? What measures are undertaken, and how successful are these? In his timely, topical study, Hollander lists common implications of living with and rehabilitating HI-TOADS, and he puts forward specific policy recommendations for redressing the critical issues that are raised. At a time when we are ever more concerned with the intersection of the built and natural environments, this book is not to be missed.

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Polluted and Dangerous: America's Worst Abandoned Properties and What Can Be Done About Them

Polluted and Dangerous: America's Worst Abandoned Properties and What Can Be Done About Them

by Justin B. Hollander
Polluted and Dangerous: America's Worst Abandoned Properties and What Can Be Done About Them

Polluted and Dangerous: America's Worst Abandoned Properties and What Can Be Done About Them

by Justin B. Hollander

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Overview

Blighted, contaminated, and abandoned property mars nearly every major American city. Justin Hollander conducted primary research in twenty urban centers containing such “brownfields” or, in the most serious cases, “HI-TOADS” (High-Impact Temporarily Obsolete Abandoned Derelict Sites). His goal was to study the sites and the official handling of them through the lenses of sustainability, urban planning, redevelopment, and environmental justice. In Polluted and Dangerous, he scrutinizes specific sites in five of the affected cities: New Bedford, Massachusetts; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Richmond, Virginia; Trenton, New Jersey; and Youngstown, Ohio. Hollander poses the serious questions that local planners face when dealing with issues related to HI-TOADS. For instance, to what degree do planners recognize and acknowledge the problems? Do they see intervention as necessary, and, if so, to whom do they assign the responsibility for it? What measures are undertaken, and how successful are these? In his timely, topical study, Hollander lists common implications of living with and rehabilitating HI-TOADS, and he puts forward specific policy recommendations for redressing the critical issues that are raised. At a time when we are ever more concerned with the intersection of the built and natural environments, this book is not to be missed.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781584657194
Publisher: University Press of New England
Publication date: 01/31/2009
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 332
Product dimensions: 6.30(w) x 9.10(h) x 1.20(d)

About the Author

JUSTIN B. HOLLANDER is assistant professor at Tufts University’s Department of Urban and Environmental Policy and Planning. From 2000 to 2006 he was a Community Planner for the U.S. General Services Administration, Public Buildings Service. He has published a number of peer-reviewed articles and has won many awards and honors for his work.

Table of Contents

List of Figures
List of Tables
Acknowledgments
List of Acronyms
Introduction
Research, Writing, and Thinking on HI-TOADS
Local Officials and Their Attitudes toward HI-TOADS
A National Perspective on What Cities Do about HI-TOADS
Redevelopment Policy in a Municipal Coalition City: Trenton, New Jersey
Slag Heaps, Steel Mills, and Sears: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
First Whales, Now Brownfields: New Bedford, Massachusetts
Planning for a Shrinking City: Youngstown, Ohio
Race, Preservation, and Redevelopment: Richmond, Virginia
Conclusion
Epilogue
APPENDIX A. Detailed Methodology for Identifying Cities for Inclusion in the Study
APPENDIX B. Ranking of U.S. Cities on Likelihood of Hosting HI-TOADS Using Five Key Variables
APPENDIX C. Correlation Matrix for Five Key Variables
APPENDIX D. Results of Cluster Analysis Using a Setting of Five Clusters
APPENDIX E. U.S. Cities with Populations Greater than 100,000 in 1970
APPENDIX F. Interview Instrument
APPENDIX G. Detailed List of HI-TOADS
APPENDIX H. Case-Study Methodology
Notes
Bibliography
Index

What People are Saying About This

Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy Professor

”Justin Hollander is one of the rising stars of American planning. His debut book offers a field guide to a nasty new set of land-use amphibians, HI-TOADS (read the book), showing how and why they are not about to go extinct. He traces their natural history, explores their ecology and describes how they can evolve—with help from their planner-keepers—into more benign creatures. "Polluted and Dangerous" is not just stylishly written. It presents outstanding analysis: passionate, practical, sharp-eyed and hopeful.”

Christopher De Sousa

“Once icons of our industrial prowess, a select group of brownfield properties are now referred to as Toads because of their ugliness and the blight they impose on surrounding neighborhoods. While the brownfields community has focused on more up-beat stories about marketable sites in more popular locations, Hollander employs rich case studies to address the worst brownfields and understand the problems they inflict, as well as the strategies employed to redevelop them - warts and all.”

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