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Alexandria's shuttered coal-fired power plant on the banks of the Potomac River is finally nearing redevelopment. Here's a rare look inside the rusting facility as it stands now, and a preview of ...
The Potomac River Generating Station, a shuttered, 71-year-old coal-fired power plant, was decommissioned in 2012. Hilco Redevelopment Partners bought the site last week for an undisclosed amount ...
The coal plant that makes up most of Alexandria's Potomac River Generating Station could be demolished as soon as 2022. Expand to read more Alex Koma Hilco Redevelopment Partners is advancing the ...
Regarding the Sept. 30 Metro article "Powering down": Certainly most of Alexandria is pleased to have GenOn's Potomac River Generating Station closed. The opposition to it was significant. I have ...
Polluting Potomac River Generating Station to Close. ALEXANDRIA, Virginia, August 30, 2011 (ENS) – A polluting 62-year-old coal-fired power plant on the Potomac River in Alexandria will be ...
Electricity providers have confirmed that the coal-fired Potomac River Generating Station in Alexandria is not needed to supply power to the Washington, D.C. region — news that puts the plant on ...
The NRG Dickerson Power Plant in Dickerson, Maryland, has been identifiedas the source of a mysterious sheen that appeared in the Potomac River on November 27, the Unified Command, which is led by ...
Edison power plant in Williamsport, Maryland, after the March 18, 1936 flood, surrounded by water from the Potomac River. The facility later became the R. Paul Smith Power Station.
NRG Energy's power plant in Dickerson, Maryland, has been identified as the source of the oily substance first seen on the Potomac River a little more than a week ago, the EPA said.
U.S. Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman ordered Mirant Corp. Tuesday to keep a Washington, D.C.-area power plant ready to run to ensure reliability in the nation's capital, trumping a state order in ...
Edison power plant in Williamsport, Maryland, after the March 18, 1936 flood, surrounded by water from the Potomac River. The facility later became the R. Paul Smith Power Station.
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