After 69 years, Springfield Underground Inc. will cease mining
operations this month at the northeast Springfield facility. What’s left
is what Springfield Underground CEO Louis Griesemer calls a small city,
complete with a rail line, street system and a dozen clients occupying
developed space. Now, some 3.6 million of undeveloped square feet is the
next action item for the company.
After 69 years, Springfield Underground Inc. will cease mining
operations this month at the northeast Springfield facility. What’s left
is what Springfield Underground CEO Louis Griesemer calls a small city,
complete with a rail line, street system and a dozen clients occupying
developed space. Now, some 3.6 million of undeveloped square feet is the
next action item for the company.
After 69 years, Springfield Underground Inc. will cease mining
operations this month at the northeast Springfield facility. What’s left
is what Springfield Underground CEO Louis Griesemer calls a small city,
complete with a rail line, street system and a dozen clients occupying
developed space. Now, some 3.6 million of undeveloped square feet is the
next action item for the company.
After 69 years, Springfield Underground Inc. will cease mining
operations this month at the northeast Springfield facility. What’s left
is what Springfield Underground CEO Louis Griesemer calls a small city,
complete with a rail line, street system and a dozen clients occupying
developed space. Now, some 3.6 million of undeveloped square feet is the
next action item for the company.
After 69 years, Springfield Underground Inc. will cease mining
operations this month at the northeast Springfield facility. What’s left
is what Springfield Underground CEO Louis Griesemer calls a small city,
complete with a rail line, street system and a dozen clients occupying
developed space. Now, some 3.6 million of undeveloped square feet is the
next action item for the company.
After 69 years, Springfield Underground Inc. will cease mining
operations this month at the northeast Springfield facility. What’s left
is what Springfield Underground CEO Louis Griesemer calls a small city,
complete with a rail line, street system and a dozen clients occupying
developed space. Now, some 3.6 million of undeveloped square feet is the
next action item for the company.
After 69 years, Springfield Underground Inc. will cease mining operations this month at the northeast Springfield facility. What’s left is what Springfield Underground CEO Louis Griesemer calls a small city, complete with a rail line, street system and a dozen clients occupying developed space. Now, some 3.6 million of undeveloped square feet is the next action item for the company.