Preservation Alliance of WV adds Middleway Historic District to list of endangered properties

PRESS RELEASE:

The Preservation Alliance of West Virginia is adding the Middleway Historic District in Jefferson  County to its West Virginia Endangered Properties List. This step, taken by the state’s leading  grassroots nonprofit preservation group, highlights the significant risks to this unique National  Register historic district that could result from the construction and operation of the proposed  Mountain Pure water bottling facility by Sidewinder Enterprises. The proposed development is  under current active consideration by Jefferson County authorities.  

“With this listing, our chief goal is to ensure that public officials and citizens of West Virginia  recognize Middleway as a rare historic treasure, not only for the state but also nationally, and to  understand the threats posed by this proposed development,” remarked Executive Director  Danielle Parker. “Middleway is an intact example of a historic rural village, featuring homes  and buildings from the 1700s and 1800s. The proposed water bottling facility risks the historic,  cultural and environmental significance of a community that has existed for nearly three  centuries. There is simply no other place like Middleway in West Virginia. It deserves to be  protected, cherished, celebrated and supported.”  

Sidewinder Enterprises, LLC has submitted a concept plan to the Jefferson County Planning  Commission to construct a one million square foot bottling facility in two stages on a remediated  brownfield industrial site bordering the village that was formerly owned by 3M/Kodak. Once completed, this would become one of the largest such facilities in the United States. The  concept plan indicates that the facility would depend on the daily extraction of over 1.2 million  gallons of water from the local aquifer that feeds Lake Louise, located just outside Middleway.  This extraction volume is the equivalent of servicing water to over 4,000 homes. Sidewinder proposes to install a pipeline to transport the water over two miles to the facility crossing through  the village with its significant historic and archeological resources. The final facility plan  includes parking for 406 tractor trailers, which would necessitate driving through Middleway’s  narrow historic streets. The proposal will be reviewed at a public meeting of the Jefferson  County Planning Commission on February 11. 

Middleway Conservancy President Jessie Norris expressed gratitude for the Preservation  Alliance’s recognition, stating, “We are deeply grateful to the Preservation Alliance of West  Virginia for acknowledging Middleway and the critical need to preserve this rare and authentic  glimpse into our past. The challenges facing Middleway undeniably warrant its inclusion on the  Endangered Properties List. The additional heavy truck traffic on our narrow historic roads could cause significant damage to the stone-stacked foundations and increase the risk of collision as  the streets are not wide enough to accommodate semi-trucks. Moreover, the remediated  3M/Kodak site contains two toxic chemicals in a plume of contaminated groundwater which  hydrological experts fear could be disrupted by the significant amount of water being moved by  the plant, threatening hundreds of residential wells in the village and surrounding areas. While  we are not against all industrial development, the scale and design of this proposed plant and  the pipeline will cause irreparable damage to our historic village. We hope Middleway’s  placement on the Endangered Properties List, along with the support of our allies, will  encourage decision-makers to consider what is best for the invaluable treasure that is  Middleway and Jefferson County.” 

Danielle Parker added, “Preservation leaders throughout the state are deeply concerned by the  threat this proposed development poses to the Middleway Historic District, which was added to  the National Register of Historic Places in 1980. A groundswell of citizen support has also  emerged, including a newly formed advocacy group called Protect Middleway, dedicated to  safeguarding the village’s water, ecology and safety. We call upon Jefferson County authorities  to reconsider the scale and direction of this proposal. Given the risks it presents to a historic  village of statewide and national significance, we urge the county to reject this development.  The Middleway Historic District deserves protection.”  

Since 1999, the West Virginia Endangered Properties List has become one of the most useful  and powerful tools of the Preservation Alliance of West Virginia for raising awareness and  garnering support for the preservation of threatened landmarks and landscapes across the  state. In 2024, the Preservation Alliance announced three additional endangered property  listings — West Virginia’s historic hand-cut stone walls, Charleston’s magnificent Art Deco  Municipal Auditorium and the proposed demolition by the National Park Service of 35 historic  structures of importance to the state’s history within the New River Gorge National Park and  Preserve.