We’ve gotten several emails in the last week or so about the “toxic” parking lot at Bedford Avenue and N. 11 Street in Williamsburg. Construction work is now going on at the site, which is slated to become a Karl Fischer building with 180 apartments. The property was once a paint factory and is listed as an “e” site, meaning that it requires a cleanup before anything can be built. A few weeks ago, we noticed that piles of (possibly contaminated) soil at the site were not being covered by tarps. Neighbors are also concerned about whether protocols are being followed and–more to the point–want to know exactly what toxins are on the site and what the risks are. Hundreds of people live across the street from the property, many with windows facing it. One person writes: “Who knows what kind of insane particles we are all breathing here in toxicburg so a little more probably wont hurt, just seems to me this should at least be looked into.” He reports: “The front end loader is taking dirt from each pile and then dumping in the truck (which is actually a container not a dumptruck?) My paranoid take? They are mixing the toxic foundation with regular dirt taking it away and dumping it somewhere. Seriously something very odd is going on.” The formal address of the site is 105 Bedford Avenue.
Work at “Toxic” Bedford Ave. Lot Worrying Neighbors
June 28th, 2008 · 3 Comments
Tags: Environment · Williamsburg
3 responses so far ↓
1 Maria // Jun 29, 2008 at 11:32 am
They should be concerned. The entire neighborhood is toxic from years of industry, and now rampant construction is loosening the chemicals into the air. The building next door to me was a large truck repair shop–during demolition myself and others in my building developed bronchitis like coughs. Across the street they hit oil while excavating. They put some tarp over it and I believe a yoga room is directly above it. A lot of people in Williamsburg have been developing asthma and other health problems that are probably environmentally related.
I’ve had it with the filth and constant pile driving and jackhammering. I’m moving to California, but if I planned to live in Williamsburg for the long haul, and especially if I was raising children here, I would be very worried about the health hazards.
2 DW // Jun 29, 2008 at 6:58 pm
Whine. Fine Whine.
How’s California these days?
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601103&sid=aBEHQkA4xFVY&refer=us
We’re doomed!
3 Robert // Jan 29, 2009 at 6:51 pm
A history of the pigment company that operated at this site is available at my website on the Brooklyn Dye Industry.