A Vermont company's plan to establish a warehouse operation inside a former store building at the old Endicott Plaza has received approval.

The Endicott planning board has voted in favor of a special use permit sought by Green Mountain Electric Supply.

The Kmart store between Vestal and Harrison avenues has been unused since it sustained heavy flood damage in September 2011.

The operating hours remained posted at the abandoned Endicott Kmart store on January 16, 2023. Photo: Bob Joseph/WNBF News
The operating hours remained posted at the abandoned Endicott Kmart store on January 16, 2023. (Photo: Bob Joseph/WNBF News)
loading...

The electrical component supply business has proposed a $12.1 million project to turn the abandoned building into a regional distribution center.

The project is receiving millions of dollars in support from New York state taxpayers. More than $3.1 million in state funding is to be provided through Endicott's Downtown Revitalization Initiative grant which was approved in December.

The state also authorized spending $350,000 for renovations to the 95,000-square-foot structure under its Restore New York initiative.

The east side of the old Endicott Plaza looking toward Harrison Avenue. Photo: Bob Joseph/WNBF News
The east side of the old Endicott Plaza looking toward Harrison Avenue. (Photo: Bob Joseph/WNBF News)
loading...

Endicott Mayor Linda Jackson told WNBF News on Tuesday afternoon that "everything's a go" with respect to the Green Mountain Electric Supply proposal. She expressed some concern about the size of a payment-in-lieu-of-taxes plan that may be granted for the project.

The 18-acre site is located just east of the Jennie F. Snapp Middle School.

Representatives of the the Broome County Industrial Development Agency and Green Mountain Electric Supply could not be reached for comment about the tax breaks being sought for the redevelopment plan.

A view of the west end of the former Kmart building on January 16, 2023. Photo: Bob Joseph/WNBF News
A view of the west end of the former Endicott Kmart building on January 16, 2023. (Photo: Bob Joseph/WNBF News)
loading...
Enter your number to get our free mobile app

Contact WNBF News reporter Bob Joseph: bob@wnbf.com or (607) 545-2250. For breaking news and updates on developing stories, follow @BinghamtonNow on Twitter.

Here are 50 of your favorite retail chains that no longer exist.

CHECK IT OUT: The Best Movie Character Names of the 1980s

How Many in America: From Guns to Ghost Towns

Can you take a guess as to how many public schools are in the U.S.? Do you have any clue as to how many billionaires might be residing there? Read on to find out—and learn a thing or two about each of these selection’s cultural significance and legacy along the way.

 

 

More From 98.1 The Hawk