May-June 2009

Biotreatment Wetlands

The final touch on a massive restoration project at the Fernald Preserve

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Fernald Preserve

Photo: Department of Energy Office of Legacy Management

By Diane Gow McDilda

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Looking at the site, it’s not obvious what took place there years ago. In May 1951, ground was broken on a 1,050-acre site in the southwest corner of Ohio, and construction began on the Feed Materials Protection Center. Over the next four decades, operations at the site would produce almost 500 million pounds of uranium product that would be used in the production of nuclear weapons.

During the years it operated, contamination spread across the site, and by 1986 the plant was on the National Priorities List. In 1989, operations at the facility ceased, and by 1991 remedial efforts had begun. The damage was extensive—over 400 acres of soil were contaminated, and a 225-acre contaminant plume existed beneath the site. Waste was left in place and included more than 1 million tons of low-level radioactive waste, 6.6 million cubic feet of containerized low-level waste, nearly 175,000 gallons of low-level liquid waste, and 31 million pounds of nuclear product. The site also included 224 process-related administrative structures.

Cleaning up the site was one of the largest remediation projects in the nation’s history. Contaminated groundwater continues to be remediated through an onsite pump-and-treat system. Waste and contaminated soil, and other media, were taken offsite for disposal. The majority of the buildings were decontaminated and decommissioned. An onsite disposal facility remains on the site, but is not accessible to the public.

Jane Powell is the Fernald Preserve site manager with the US Department of Energy (DOE), Office of Legacy Management and has a long history with the site.

Photo: Department of Energy Office of Legacy Management
The Fernald Preserve Visitors Center received a LEED platinum certification in September 2008. It was the first platinum rating in Ohio and only the second for DOE.
“I’ve been involved with this project for 26 years and was here when we made uranium,” she says.

The Office of Legacy Management was established by the DOE, to provide long-term and sustainable solutions for sites originally used during the Cold War era. The office took on responsibility for the Fernald site once environmental remediation was deemed complete in 2006. But that doesn’t mean the site that Legacy Management was left to work with was a pristine pallet. Excavations were left unfilled, and poor quality soil was left in place.

“We were left with a lot of deep excavations,” says John Homer, Fernald Preserve ecological restoration group lead with S.M. Stoller Corp. “There was a big production area with a lot of foundations; once they were pulled out and disposed of offsite, we were left with severe topography. But we took advantage of it and used it to create a series of wetlands and open water, surrounded by prairie.”

“What’s been done here verges on a miracle,” says Powell. “It was the combined effort of the DOE, contractors, the community, and regulators.”

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The miracle Powell refers to is the effort involved, from the community through the government, to make Fernald Preserve what it is today—a connected series of wooded lots, prairie, wetlands, open water, and savanna. Rather than provide ingredients for the country’s nuclear arsenal, the site now offers passive and active recreation for the community, along with habitat and feeding grounds for all classes of animals from mute swans and salamanders to beavers and toads. Over three miles of open and wooded paths—with names like Shingle Oak Trail—wind through a portion of the site, allowing visitors to enjoy the flora and fauna Fernald Preserve has to offer.

And one onsite building not only tells the story of the preserve, but also offers an example in sustainable design and operation. Next Page >

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