Millions in local, state and federal tax dollars set for historic mill
demolition
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[January 03, 2024]
By Zeta Cross | The Center Square contributor
(The Center Square) – With the help of local, state and federal taxpayer
funds, Illinois’ capital city is turning the decrepit old Pillsbury Mill
into an economic renewal project.
The 100-year-old Pillsbury Mill flour and grain plant in Springfield has
been abandoned and deteriorating for 20 years. The 18-acre site has a
total of 23 buildings, including a 242-foot high headhouse and 160
100-foot tall silos. The 500,000 square feet factory also contains lead
paint and asbestos, necessitating a costly EPA-approved brownfield
clean-up.
Despite its location in a community of educated workers that is next
door to a railyard with nationwide connections, no developer has been
willing to take on the estimated $10 million cost of demolition and
cleanup, said Chris Richmond, president and treasurer of the non-profit
Moving Pillsbury Forward. In the plant’s heyday, Richmond’s father
worked at the Pillsbury Mill.
Alongside community allies, Richmond created MPF to determine how to
demolish the plant and attract a developer.
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“The cleanup project is intimidating, daunting and expensive but MPF is
determined to rid Springfield of what has become a symbol of decay and
hopelessness. It is unacceptable to have it at the center of the
community,” Richmond said.
In 2021, the U.S. Congress passed the bipartisan 2021 Infrastructure
Investment and Jobs Act that included $1.2 billion in federal taxpayer
funds for brownfield cleanup.
“If ever there was a time to do this project, our engineers advised us
that this is the time,” Richmond said.
MPF announced its approval for $2 million in federal tax funds for
brownfield remediation in January 2023. The project also secured $2
million from the city of Springfield and $1.2 million in state funding
in addition to $800,000 from the U.S. EPA. So far MPF has raised $6
million of the $10 million needed for the demolition and renewal.
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The former Pillsbury Mill in Springfield
PillsburyProject.org
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“We’re aiming at 24 to 36 months to have the site cleared for
redevelopment,” Richmond said, a timetable he said surprises a lot of
people.
Meanwhile, Richmond and his MPF colleagues are working with historians
to collect oral histories from people who worked at the plant.
“Just this week, I connected with a guy whose grandfather worked at the
plant during World War II,” Richmond said. “His grandfather told him
that the plant worked with the War Department during World War II to
develop a more stable flour with a longer shelf life that could be
transported around the world as part of the war effort.”
From the beginning of their effort, MPF has invited local artists and
photographers to the plant so that they can document the site and make
art.
“We recognized early on that we had some high-level street artists that
had visited the site prior to our ownership. So we documented what was
there,” he said.
One day last summer, Richmond and a colleague came across two graffiti
artists who were spray painting some walls. Instead of chasing them
away, they got to talking and decided to work with them, Richmond said.
“All the art that they created was respectful and well-placed … We
wanted to know what kind of social and cultural statements they were
trying to make,” he said.
MPF wound up letting the artists create a gallery. In November, two
graffiti exhibits attracted more than 1,000 people.
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