Ohio River Park

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ohio_River_Park an entity of type: SpatialThing

Ohio River Park is a Superfund Site located in Neville Island, Pennsylvania. Between the 1920s-1970s, the Site was used for municipal waste, pesticide manufacturing, coke sludge disposal, cement manufacturing disposal, and pesticide waste. In 1977, Neville Land Company donated the Site to Allegheny County who started developing the Site as a community park. In 1979, Allegheny County found various hazardous contaminants on the Site. On August 30, 1990, the Site was determined to be a Superfund Site due to VOCs, SVOCs, inorganics, and pesticides being present in the surface soil, subsurface soil, surface water, river sediment, and groundwater. Soil remediation began in February 1998 and ended in September 1999. Today, Ohio River Park has the Robert Morris University Island Sports Center and rdf:langString
rdf:langString Ohio River Park
rdf:langString Ohio River Park
xsd:float 40.51852798461914
xsd:float -80.15242004394531
xsd:integer 65737340
xsd:integer 1080000057
rdf:langString Neville Island, Pennsylvania
rdf:langString PAD980508816
rdf:langString Neville Island
rdf:langString September 1999
rdf:langString Allegheny County
rdf:langString August 1990
rdf:langString USA Pennsylvania
rdf:langString Neville Land Company
rdf:langString Pennsylvania
xsd:string 40.51852777777778 -80.15241666666667
rdf:langString Ohio River Park is a Superfund Site located in Neville Island, Pennsylvania. Between the 1920s-1970s, the Site was used for municipal waste, pesticide manufacturing, coke sludge disposal, cement manufacturing disposal, and pesticide waste. In 1977, Neville Land Company donated the Site to Allegheny County who started developing the Site as a community park. In 1979, Allegheny County found various hazardous contaminants on the Site. On August 30, 1990, the Site was determined to be a Superfund Site due to VOCs, SVOCs, inorganics, and pesticides being present in the surface soil, subsurface soil, surface water, river sediment, and groundwater. Soil remediation began in February 1998 and ended in September 1999. Today, Ohio River Park has the Robert Morris University Island Sports Center and Coraopolis Bridge on top of it. Additionally, benzene continues to be monitored because it is still present in the Site's groundwater.
rdf:langString VOCs, semi-VOCs, inorganics, and pesticides
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 15950
<Geometry> POINT(-80.152420043945 40.518527984619)

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