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New England Construction, August 13, 2007
A defunct paper mill in Brewer, Maine, a city of 9,000 along Maine's
Penobscot River, will be resurrected as a modular construction facility
providing hundreds of jobs and a boost for the local economy under a
plan announced by Brewer officials. Pittsfield, Maine, contractor
Cianbro and South Brewer Redevelopment LLC have signed a memorandum of
understanding to work together towards a purchase and sale agreement for
the former Eastern Fine Paper mill site. Cianbro intends to revitalize
the mill site as a modular construction facility for the fabrication and
assembly of large modules weighing in excess of 1,000 tons for
industrial process plants located in North America and abroad. North
Carolina-based Niemann Capital, LLC, the community development firm
previously selected for the site, agreed to allow Cianbro to redevelop
the Brewer mill site. At one time, there were more than 100 paper mills
in the state, with production at some reaching 1,000 tons per day, and
one-quarter of Maine's manufacturing workforce employed in the industry.
But paper mills and their jobs have been disappearing from Maine for the
last 35 years as companies pursued cheaper labor in other parts of the
United States and in other countries. The Eastern Fine Paper mill was
one of these mills, closing its doors in 2004 after operating as a
lumber mill and a paper mill for more than a century. During the years
since the mill closed, the site has been the subject of extensive
preparation for redevelopment by the South Brewer Redevelopment agency.
SBR has worked with the Environmental Protection Agency's Brownfield
program on two environmental assessments leading up to the remediation
planning. The first phase of environmental remediation was scheduled to
begin this summer with soil remediation, the removal of abandoned above
ground fuel storage tanks, and an updated lead and asbestos study.
Additional work will take place this summer on the traffic study, road
improvements and design of a pier — steel and other construction
materials will sail in while finished components sail out on the
Penobscot River. Planners expect the site to be fully operational by
April 1, 2008.
New England Construction,
an Associated Construction Publications title,
August 13, 2007,
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