Are metro Atlanta's abandoned commercial and industrial sites hurting
the city's economic development potential?
That's the question Andrew Young School researchers are asking in a new
study on the economic impact of brownfields - properties where development
is impaired by the possibility of environmental contamination.
"Brownfields are typically older industrial sites or commercial sites
that aren't in their highest and best use," says Laura
Taylor, assistant professor of economics and a researcher in the Andrew
Young School's Environmental Policy
Program. "They really should be redeveloped, because there are better
economic opportunities for the properties."
Funded by a $93,000 grant from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
the study looks at the loss in property values and reduced resale rates
of hundreds of brownfields in Atlanta.
The project, which is due to be completed this summer, also examines
whether some communities suffer disproportionately from the negative effects
of such properties.
The results may be used to develop governmental policies that can enhance
economic development and help keep the environment clean and safe, Taylor
says.
Liability concerns
Developers and lenders often shrink from investing in contaminated land
because they can be held legally liable for the cleanup and any damage
that might already have occurred, Taylor says.
"Even suspected contamination can keep these properties from being redeveloped,"
she says. "Anybody who touches the property can get pulled into the legal
liability. So there are some strong disincentives to be involved if you
think there's contamination on a site."
Environmental problems aren't limited to old garbage dumps or abandoned
industrial complexes. Dry cleaning establishments, auto body shops and
other small businesses where chemicals are used and disposed of improperly
may also create brownfield pockets in their neighborhoods, Taylor says.
When owners move or shut down their businesses, the abandoned property
often languishes for years, exacerbating urban blight and creating conditions
ripe for urban sprawl. If a site is thought to be contaminated, developers
who otherwise might buy the property may flee to the suburbs, where it's
cheaper and less risky to build.
No one knows for sure the size of the problem, but more than 2,000 properties
in Fulton County alone are recorded on state and federal lists that track
environmental contamination. Fulton County encompasses the heart of metro
Atlanta.
'Small' problems
One example of a splashy brownfield redevelopment project is Jacoby Development
Inc.'s plan to turn the 138-acre Atlantic Steel site in Atlanta's Midtown
into a combined office, retail and residential complex.
But Taylor's project is unique mainly because it examines the combined
impact of smaller properties. Large industrial complexes such as the Atlantic
Steel site probably comprise less than 25 percent of all brownfields,
Taylor says.
"Atlantic Steel and other large sites have been studied in the past,"
Taylor says.
"There's very little evidence on what the economic impacts are of these
small undeveloped sites on their surroundings. And these things may really
bring down a neighborhood."
Photo above: BROWN DOWNTOWN: Environmental policy researcher Laura Taylor is examining the economic impact of Atlanta's brownfields, properties that are or might be environmentally contaminated. Taylor plans to incorporate her research into the undergraduate and graduate environmental economics courses she'll be teaching this fall.
|