Adaptations and Policies
Climate Impact
Brownfields Basics
Environmental Impacts
Hazards and Contaminants
100

Adaptation or mitigation: Elevating homes within a coastal flood zone

adaptation

100

Three significant climate impacts that we see in Connecticut.

Increased precipitation, rising temperatures, more heat waves, more days of extreme heat, more extreme rainfall events, sea level rise, high-tide/sunny day flooding

100

What is a Brownfield?

A property where reuse may be complicated by the presence or potential presence of a hazardous substance, pollutant, or contaminant.

A site that is completely or partially abandoned AND is likely polluted from past human activities.

100

What can contaminated soil or groundwater do to nearby communities?

Harm human health, limit property use, and affect the environment.

100

Which hazardous building material is often found in old brownfield buildings?

Asbestos

200

The two main components used to calculate the "vulnerability" of an asset during a climate vulnerability assessment.

exposure + sensitivity

200

The main health concerns associated with extreme heat.

degrading mental health, mortality, vulnerable populations, air quality

200

True or False: All brownfields are abandoned properties.

False. 

A partially used property can still be a brownfield, such as an active but underutilized facility.

200

True or false: Plants and trees can sometimes help clean up contaminated soil.

True (This is called phytoremediation).

200

What common brownfield contaminant is often found associated with electrical equipment?

PCBs

300

Two green stormwater practices that are currently being used on the UConn Storrs campus.

Permeable asphalt, pervious interlocking pavers/blocks/bricks, bioswales, rain gardens, green roofs, constructed green catch basins

300

Two climate-driven impacts to human health.

Tick-borne disease, mosquito-borne disease, heat impacts, harmful ‘algal’ blooms, air quality, particulate matter (in air), wildfire smoke, loss of food source, degraded or contaminated food/water

300

True or False: All Superfund sites are brownfields

False

300

Name one contaminant or pollutant often found at brownfield sites.

Lead, petroleum, asbestos, PCBs, PFAs, VOCs, etc.

300

What compound is often found in old gas stations due to leaking underground storage tanks?

What is benzene?

400

The negative consequences of hardened/armored/traditional shoreline protection.

  • Amplifies the force of wave action, increases erosion elsewhere, restricts sediment from the system, loss of coastal/intertidal habitat
400

The level of sea level rise (SLR) we expect to see along the Connecticut coastline by 2050

20 inches

400

What is the key first step in redeveloping a brownfield?

Conducting an environmental site assessment.

400

Why are rivers and lakes near brownfields considered sensitive receptors?

Water pollution or runoff contamination can occur from a brownfield site, which may result in damage to aquatic ecosystems and waterbodies used for drinking water

400

What is the process called that occurs when contaminants move from soil into indoor air through foundation cracks?

Vapor Intrusion 
500

The components of a "nature-based" climate adaptation practice.

Replicates natural systems, multiple co-benefits, incorporates natural elements, habitats and processes, infrastructure, healthy ecosystems

500

The meaning of "resilience" to climate impacts.

Ability to “bounce back”, maintain the health of a community, plan for and respond to impacts

500

What’s one challenge a community might face when reusing land that used to be polluted?

Cleaning up contamination, cost, safety concerns, getting approval, etc.

500

Name one environmental benefit when a brownfield is turned into green space or parkland?

Improved biodiversity, reduced urban heat, reduced atmospheric carbon dioxide, reduced storm water runoff (more infiltration into the soil), etc.

500

What is a type of cleanup option used when contaminants are left in place?

Capping