Summary
The four-story building was built in 1878 and most recently served as an operating Kimberly-Clark paper mill until 1999.\n The building will house the college's postal and mailing services, a cinema, dining services, student activities center and other functions. The condominium and retail neighborhood development ("Condos on the water," MARKETPLACE Sept. 2) is slated for 1S acres of waterfront under the College Avenue bridge, adjacent to Telulah Park on the river's southeast shore (near the site of the former Consolidated Paper mill and MI Drilling). RiverHeath will integrate upscale residential and retail with green space and urban amenities, like an outdoor elevator up to the College Avenue Bridge, an ice skating rank, restaurants and a theater.
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Extract
Redeveloping the Fox
In 2007, when Glatfelter announced the closing of its paper mill in Neenah's downtown business district, the city faced the specter of its potential aftermath.
Neenah faced losing a longtime company, and 3S0 people would soon be out of work. A humongous piece of riverfront property would be vacated, and it wouldn't be adding to the tax base any time soon."We were faced with an abandoned mill," says Neenah Mayor George Scherck.With some Fox Valley mill sites having stood empty for 40 or more years, the closing was the kind of news that...See the full content of this document
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