MUNCIE — They range in size from a parcel of land where a new downtown hotel is being built to acres of land where heavy industry operated for decades. They range in nature from a former video rental store to a former auto parts plant.

They are Muncie's brownfields: properties where industrial and commercial operations, from wire manufacturers to a near-downtown bar, once did business.

There are 68 of them, counting a handful in Delaware County's towns outside Muncie.

Some, like four parcels where the Courtyard hotel is being built on the south edge of downtown, have been dealt with. Others, like the 50-acre Indiana Steel and Wire property on East Jackson Street, have been announced for a new purpose, in that case the Kitselman Pure Energy Park. Still others, like the former BorgWarner Automotive plant along Kilgore Avenue or the site of the former Chevrolet factory along Eighth Street, have seen varying degrees of interest in renewed use.

One thing's for certain: Many of the 68 properties on the list might linger in uncertainty for years to come.

"What the public has to understand is that these problems took a hundred-plus years to develop," local economic development consultant Brad Bookout told The Star Press. "They were created over a long, long period of time. Not to say it will take a hundred years to fix, but it won't take a month."

Bookout, with information from Gretchen Cheesman of Muncie's community development and unsafe building authority staff, compiled the list of brownfields and shared it with The Star Press.

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