- Shippan
Shippan is a section of the city of Stamford,
Connecticut .The Shippan section borders several other neighborhoods: to the south is
Shippan Point , to the west is the South End, to the north is Downtown, to the northeast is the East Side, and to the east is The Cove.The Shippan area includes Shippan Avenue, Elm Street and the smaller streets nearby. The area south of the intersection of Shippan Avenue and Magee Avenue is considered the
Shippan Point neighborhood. To the north, the theMetro-North train tracks and Interstate 95 separate Shippan fromDowntown Stamford .Neighborhood features
The neighborhood has a very integrated mix of ethnic groups and even ethnic stores, including Asian (Indian) stores and Italian pizzerias are on Cove Road, and European delis on Elm Street. Blacks, whites, Hispanics, Indians and others all live in Shippan.
The neighborhood includes
Cummings Park public beach, St. Mary Roman Catholic Church, St. Benedict Roman Catholic Church, a supermarket, and many restaurants and small retail businesses.A
Clairol factory is located where the Shippan meets the Cove section on Cove Avenue. In 2008, Clairol Corporation announced plans to sell the facility.ewage treatment plant
The Stamford municipal
sewage treatment plant, which also serves Darien, is located on Magee Avenue by the East Branch of Stamford Harbor. Originally built in 1974 with a capacity of 17 million gallons per day, the plant was upgraded in 2005 for $105 million, increasing its capacity to 24 million gallons per day and a maximum peak flow capacity of 68 million gallons per day. The city began treating sewage to removenitrogen in 1988, and the 2005 upgrade increased the amount of nitrogen removed from sewage from 65 percent to 90 percent. The upgrade also included three odor-control machines at a total cost of $6 million. The machines use massive fans to suck odiferous fumes into chambers where chemicals are used to remove 99.9 percent of thehydrogen sulfide that causes the odor. Anultraviolet light disinfectant machine sterilizes the water in the plant and eliminates the need to use and store large amounts ofchlorine . [Dalena, Doug, "City sewer plant upgrade completed", "The Advocate" of Stamford,October 20 2005 ]Notes
External links
* [http://www.ci.stamford.ct.us/ City of Stamford]
* [http://www.stamfordhistory.org/ Stamford Historical Society]
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