Waterbury officials are preparing to spend another $5.44 million on a long-running cleanup of the former Anaconda American Brass site near the city center, preparing for its redevelopment.
The roughly 20.5-acre site along Freight Street had, until recent years, hosted a massive industrial complex that had serviced the city’s once-prosperous brass industry for well over a century.
As the brass industry faded, portions of a building at 170 Freight St. were leased out to various companies. The neighboring building at 130 Freight St. hosted a handler of environmental waste products.
City officials have used millions of state and federal grant dollars in recent years to acquire and demolish buildings in the complex that were aging or entirely decrepit and failing.
Waterbury Development Corp. Executive Director James Nardozzi said the city has about $11 million pooled from state and federal sources to remove foundations and further environmental cleanup of the site.
On Monday, the city’s Board of Aldermen will be asked to sign off on a $5.44 million contract with Plainville-based Manafort Brothers to demolish the foundation slab and remove subsurface utilities at 170 Freight St.
A similar effort will be pursued later at 130 Freight St.
After the slabs are removed, the city will be able to have the soils underneath tested for possible contamination.
Nardozzi is hoping to spend the $11 million cleanup pool in 2026. That will result in a much cleaner site and a fresh understanding of any remaining pollution. He believes the city will be ready to begin seeking development partners by the end of next year. The aim is to create a mix of residential, commercial and retail development – essentially a new neighborhood, Nardozzi said.
“This is an extremely important site for the economic redevelopment of Waterbury,” Nardozzi said Friday.
The downtown-adjacent site has a lot to offer developers, Nardozzi noted. The land is flat and bordered by the Naugatuck River on one side. The site is within a short walking distance to the city’s passenger rail station and is positioned near ramps to Route 8 and Interstate 84.
The city has already used federal funding to upgrade utilities along Freight Street, making for easy and reliable connections. The streetscape was also improved, with plans to connect a pedestrian bike lane to a growing riverside trail.
Manafort Brothers was the lowest of four bidders for the pending slab removal effort. The company is very familiar with the site, having been hired to a $3.6 million contract in 2023 to level the 138,304-square-foot building on the site.
