Argentine Community in Kansas City, Kansas, Transforms Through Environmental Cleanup
– EPA Region 7 Feature –
By Ben Washburn, Office of Public Affairs
The Kansas City Structural Steel Site in Kansas City, Kansas, exemplifies how environmental cleanup, community partnership, and a vision for the future can transform a site from a liability into a source of community pride.
Cleaning Up Nearly 100 Years of Contaminants
Beginning in the late 1880s and continuing through the 1970s, the site was used for industrial purposes resulting in soil and groundwater contamination by heavy metals. In the 1990s, EPA began a cleanup of the site.
With the cleanup of the site complete, EPA and local stakeholder attention turned to the site’s future and how best to repurpose the site into a community asset. El Centro, a local nonprofit organization, worked with EPA to acquire the property and identify potential reuse scenarios. As part of the process, El Centro worked to identify appropriate uses for the property and how the Argentine communityof Kansas City, Kansas, wanted to see the site used.
Finding the Right Redevelopment for the Community
“This site’s new future is taking shape because EPA partnered with local governments, innovative businesses, and the state of Kansas to use flexible cleanup laws for the Argentine community,” former EPA Region 7 Administrator Karl Brooks said in 2014. “La Plaza Argentine shows EPA’s Brownfields Program helping solve the challenge of offering choices for affordable healthy food in our cities, while creating jobs for the proud folks who call Argentine home.”
Supporting Kansas Communities
The new development contains 61,000 square feet of commercial opportunity, and in 2017, the Unified Government of Wyandotte County and Kansas City, Kansasopened a 6,000-square-foot South Patrol police station in the area.
“The real test for projects like this one is whether residents feel like, when it’s done, their neighborhood is a better place to live than it was before. This project meets that test in every way,” said Ann Murguia, who served as the Argentine Neighborhood Development Association executive director until 2018.
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Redeveloping the Kansas City Structural Steel Site has served as a catalyst for the Argentine neighborhood, and showcases how EPA’s cleanup programs can work in partnership with local governments and communities to restore once-contaminated sites and transform them into community assets.
- Learn more about redevelopment at the Kansas City Structural Steel Site
- EPA's Superfund Site Profile Page for the Kansas City Structural Steel Site