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THE NYANZA COLORANT PLANT. Nyanza is a Superfund Site in the middle of Ashland Massachusetts, it was listed as one of the first ten sites upon the founding of the EPA’s Superfund Program in the early 1980’s.
- What We're Doing
OVERVIEW. In the center of Ashland Massachusetts sits the...
- Contact
The Nyanza Colorant Plant The Ashland Healing Garden The...
- The Library Exhibition
Within the Ashland Public Library resides one of the EPA's...
- Public Walkshops
In the center of Ashland is one of the first Superfund...
- Bio, Credits, and Partners
Bio, Credits, & Partners. BIO / Dan Borelli . Director of...
- Videos and Links
VIDEOS. E ntering Ashland. D irt Remittance: From Ashland to...
- The Streetlights
Given that the Nyanza site had 100 different source...
- The Ashland Healing Garden
This is located on a town owned parcel behind the left-field...
- What We're Doing
The Ashland-Nyanza Project makes visible the hidden narratives of a contaminated community. This project makes public the various histories and possible futures of the Town of Ashland and its Superfund site, the Nyanza Colorant Plant.
OVERVIEW. In the center of Ashland Massachusetts sits the Nyanza Superfund Site, one of the first ten sites of the EPA’s Superfund Program, launched in 1982. Nyanza was a chemically based dye company, one of the first colorant plants in US history.
15 Φεβ 2018 · The Ashland-Nyanza Project uses color to promote history and healing. by Cara Giaimo February 15, 2018. In the summer of 2016, the artist Dan Borelli changed the colors of the streetlights in...
Drone Tour Revisiting Nyanza Chemical Site & Solar Cap The pollution was caused by decades of toxic industrial waste dumping from numerous companies, including Nyanza, a former color dye and...
Nyanza | Hazardous Waste | Damage Assessment, Remediation, and Restoration Program. Hazardous Waste Site | Ashland, MA | 1917 – 1978. What Happened? Between 1917 and 1978, Nyanza, Inc. and other companies manufactured textile dyes and other products at this site.
Ashland, MA (population 14,700) is home to an EPA superfund site created by the Nyanza chemical dye company. Artist Dan Borelli seeks to produce a public conversation around the remediation of this site and seeks to create a community asset out of a problematic history.