CASTLO News!
"Building Starts on Bridge to Development"
Tuesday, September 28, 2004
Construction should take about a year.
By BOB JACKSON
VINDICATOR COURTHOUSE REPORTER
YOUNGSTOWN — Construction was to begin today on a new bridge that
Mahoning County officials hope will revive an area that was once a
national steelmaking hub.
The 364-foot-long bridge will span the Mahoning River, connecting
Walton Avenue with an abandoned brownfield site in Campbell known as
the Mahoning River Corridor of Opportunity.
"The key word there is opportunity," said William DiCicco, director
of Castlo Community Improvement Corp.
A groundbreaking ceremony was to mark the onset of construction.
Another ceremony will be held when the bridge is finished in about a
year, said Joseph Caruso, assistant Mahoning County administrator.
Planned for Years
The $4 million project has been years in the planning, said county
Commissioner Ed Reese. He said the bridge will be a long-missing
link between Youngstown and the 1,400-acre site that was once home
to many of the area's steel mills.
"Hopefully this will be like closing one chapter and starting a new
one," Reese said. "The steel mills are history and it's time to get
past that."
The bridge will begin at the end of Walton Avenue, stretch over the
river and some railroad tracks, and end at an unimproved gravel
roadway in Campbell. Reese said the bridge will open the area for
development and, it's hoped, jobs.
"This area that was once such an industrial hotbed for our area
might, with some diversification, be able to be an asset for our
community again," he said. Proper marketing will be the key to
successful development, Reese said.
The site is along the banks of the river, bordering Youngstown,
Struthers and Campbell. Officials have said it was once the
third-largest steel producing center in the country.
Unsuccessful Attempts
Officials have tried unsuccessfully over the years to develop the
property, but always have been hampered by a lack of access. A
bridge that once connected the property to Youngstown was torn down
years ago. The only way in and out now is a run-down trestle bridge
just east of where the new bridge will be, DiCicco said.
"There is just no major access down into that area right now,"
Caruso said.
DiCicco said representatives of the communities located along the
corridor have created a long-range plan aimed at attracting
businesses to the site.
An official from the U.S. Department of Commerce's Economic
Development Administration was to attend today's groundbreaking and
deliver a $1.8 million federal grant toward the project.
Other funding is being provided by the Ohio Department of
Development, the Ohio Rail Development Commission, Youngstown
Community Development Block Grant, Mahoning County commissioners and
engineer's offices, and a $50,000 grant received through the office
of U.S. Rep. Tim Ryan of Niles, D-17th.
