Involving Stakeholders To Achieve Successful Development Of Brownfield Sites

Involving stakeholders to achieve successful development of brownfield sites R. D. Sterner1, R. N. Hull2 & R. F. Willes3 1Battelle Northwest/Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, USA. 2Cantox Environmental Inc., Canada. 3Reon Development Corporation, Canada. Abstract Our overall quality of life...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inWIT Transactions on Ecology and the Environment Vol. 55
Main Authors Stenner, R D, Hull, R N, Willes, R F
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Southampton W I T Press 01.01.2002
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Involving stakeholders to achieve successful development of brownfield sites R. D. Sterner1, R. N. Hull2 & R. F. Willes3 1Battelle Northwest/Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, USA. 2Cantox Environmental Inc., Canada. 3Reon Development Corporation, Canada. Abstract Our overall quality of life depends on balancing the interrelationship between human and ecological health, socio-cultural values, and economic well-being. Achieving appropriate balance of these components is critical to modern environmental (e.g., Brownfield site) decision-making. The American Society of Testing and Materials (ASTM) is involved in developing a standard guide to facilitate the analysis and management of Quality of Life decision making. This guide will provide a process to help identify, analyze, and resolve stakeholders' issues associated with environmental problems. A key component to the Quality of Life process is to empower the affected stakeholders to enable genuine participation in the decision making and management process. The basic components of the Quality of Life process will be presented along with an example case where the methods have been applied successfully to the development of a Brownfield property in urban Toronto, Canada. The application of the Quality of Life process enabled participation of all the affected stakeholders (people in the community, the developer, local government and regulators) from the very beginning. The stakeholders participated in all decision-making of the redevelopment process; from planning the types and locations of buildings through landscaping/community art for the site, traffic flow/public transportation, day-care requirements and a variety of specific community amenities (up-grading lake access portals, various water recreation facilities, community playground equipment). Application of the Quality of Life process resulted in a win-win situation for all stakeholders (i.e., people in the community, regulators and the developer). The derelict industrial property is being replaced by a residential development that will improve the overall quality
Bibliography:SourceType-Other Sources-1
ObjectType-Article-1
content type line 63
ObjectType-Feature-2
ISSN:1746-448X
1743-3541
DOI:10.2495/BF020141