From Carburetors to Golf: Youth Sports Facility to Arise from Decades-Long Site Cleanup in St. Louis
– EPA Region 7 Feature –
By Alyssa Cole, Office of Public Affairs
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In September 2020, EPA Region 7 joined the community to celebrate a successful cleanup that has readied the site to be revitalized as a youth sports facility for the Boys & Girls Club.
What was once an environmental hazard will now serve the Boys & Girls Club of Greater St. Louis as a youth golf training and mentoring facility. In partnership with the Gateway PGA REACH organization, they will build the facility on most of the site property. The St. Louis Land Reutilization Authorityowns part of the site, which it wants to develop into a pollinator park, urban prairie feature, or community garden to support the surrounding reuse.
History
In its prime, Carter Carburetor was an energetic manufacturing plant, boasting 480,000 square feet of space in the heart of the city. The plant housed numerous buildings for offices, testing and manufacturing of carburetors for gasoline- and diesel-powered engines.
During its tenure, Carter Carburetor supplied parts to major companies across the United States, including Chevrolet, Buick, Oldsmobile, Chrysler and Packard.
A major employer in St. Louis with over 3,000 workers, the company created the Jeep waterproof Y-S single-barrel carburetor of the World War II era, as well as the first four-barrel carburetor on the market.
The company supplied carburetors until 1984, when ACF closed the factory following automakers’ switch from carburetors to electronic fuel injection. The property was then deeded to the Land Reutilization Authority of St. Louis.
Contaminants Left Behind
In 2013, EPA entered into a $35 million settlement agreement with ACF Industries Inc. to pave the way for the site cleanup, building demolition and, ultimately, productive reuse.
Cleanup of the site began that year with the removal of asbestos and hazardous debris from buildings on the property. Demolition and removal of the buildings began in 2015. Additional waste removal work, on-site waste treatment, and other cleanup work continued into 2017. EPA and ACF completed site work in May 2020. As a part of the site cleanup, ACF conducted removal actions to address dilapidated buildings on-site that were heavily contaminated with PCBs and asbestos.
Cleaning Up for the Future
Attendees of the event included EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler; EPA Region 7 Administrator Jim Gulliford; William Lacy Clay, U.S. Representative from Missouri’s 1st congressional district; Dr. Flint Fowler, Boys & Girls Club of Greater St. Louis president; Wendell Kimbrough, Area Resources for Community and Human Services CEO; and Ozzie Smith, Gateway PGA REACH president.
“Today is a historic day, not only for St. Louis, but also the Boys & Girls Club and this entire community,” Dr. Fowler said. “Today we will be signing the prospective purchaser’s agreement with EPA, providing the appropriate protection for the Boys & Girls Club as we move forward to secure the land from ACF and develop a project that will be beneficial to our program.”
“Transferring this property to the Boys & Girls Club allows them to provide another experience to the children of the community – the experience of learning golf and all of the disciplines and skills that it takes to play golf,” Gulliford said.
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At the event, Administrator Wheeler announced the completion of the cleanup at the Carter Carburetor Superfund Site and transferred ownership to the Boys & Girls Club of Greater St. Louis, who will work with Gateway PGA REACH to plan the construction of the youth golf training and mentoring facility.
- EPA's Cleanup Page has Carter Carburetor Site details
- Learn more on EPA's Site Response Page
- Read about the history of the Carter Carburetor Company