Vacated and remanded by published opinion. Judge WIDENER wrote the opinion, in which Chief Judge WILKINSON and Judge DIANA GRIBBON MOTZ concurred.
OPINION
This is a suit brought by Russ and Lee Pye, seeking to require the Corps of Engineers to conform to statutory and regulatory requirements before issuing a permit to construct a road crossing within the waters of the United States. The Pyes own adjoining land to the land on which the road crossing is constructed. Their land also adjoins what is known as Tract M of the Sheppard Tract on which an eighteenth century plantation house connected to the Hayne family is situated and is near to, a matter of several hundred feet, the site of an African American cemetery owned by Westvaco. The cemetery itself adjoins the Pyes’ land and is probably partly on the Pyes’ land. The old plantation house is eligible for the National Register of Historic Places, as is the African-American cemetery.
The district court dismissed the Pyes’ complaint for lack of standing. We are of opinion such dismissal was error, and we vacate and remand for consideration of the merits of the Pyes’ complaint.
I.
The series of events giving rise to this litigation stems from the County’s proposal to improve an existing dirt access road (the road) leading from United States
In order to improve access to Area M, the County proposed to fill the 0.23 acres of wetland occupied by the road, to grade the road, and to install a culvert to permit drainage under the improved road. Because the project involved filling wetlands, the County had to obtain a permit from the Corps under section 404 of the Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. § 1344.
The permitting process began on October 23, 1991 when the County initially applied for a permit to fill the wetlands. At this time, the County intended to use the road in connection with the construction of an ash monofill
The Corps forwarded the County’s permit application on July 31, 1996 to the United States Department of the Interi- or, Fish and Wildlife Service; the State Historic Preservation Office; the Environmental Protection Agency, Wetlands Regulatory Unit; the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources; the United States Department of Commerce, National Marine Fisheries Service; and the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control, Office of Ocean and Coastal Resource Management. Both the National Marine Fisheries Service and the Fish and Wildlife service responded to the Corps concerning the project’s effects, as required under section 7 of the Endangered Species Act. 16 U.S.C. §§ 1531-43. The Deputy State Historic Preservation Officer also responded and indicated that the eighteenth century plantation home site was eligible for listing on the National Register of Historic Places. On January 23, 1997, the United States Department of the Interior, National Parks Service, found the Hayne Plantation site and the African American cemetery site eligible for listing on the National Register of Historic Places and informed the Corps of that decision by copy of that letter. The letter indicated that the Service did not find that the area was eligible for listing as a rural historic district.
The Pyes filed a complaint in the United States District Court, District of South Carolina on February 19, 1997 alleging that the Corps failed to complete all the required steps under federal law prior to granting the County the Nationwide Permit 14. They asserted federal question jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1331 and because the United States was a defendant. They sued under The Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § 702; The Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. § 1251, et seq.; The National Historic Preservation Act, 16 U.S.C. § 470, et seq.; The National Environmental Policy Act, 42 U.S.C. § 4321, et seq.; and The Endangered Species Act, 16 U.S.C. § 1531, et seq. The Corps answered the complaint on April 25, 1997. In response to the litigation, the Corps suspended the permit on May 13, 1997 to confirm that it was properly authorized.
Under this further review, the Corps notified the Fish and Wildlife Service to confine its analysis concerning endangered species to Area M. The Fish and Wildlife Service, later that month, answered that it could not discern any adverse impact on Area M. On November 19, 1997, the Corps reinstated the County’s Nationwide Permit 14, allowing it to complete the road improvement project. In reinstating the permit, the Corps did not consider the impact of the improvement on the historic site in Area M, or any other area, instead, confining its analysis to the “footprint”
After reinstatement of the permit, the Corps moved for summary judgment on February 10, 1998. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the Corps and dismissed the complaint, finding that the Pyes did not have standing to bring this action because they did not demonstrate either an injury in fact, causation of an injury by the Corps, or the ability of the court to redress an injury. Pye v. United States, Army Corps of Eng’rs, No. 2:97-00431-2 (D.S.C. July 24, 1998). The County advises us that it has completed the road improvement project, however the Corps freely admits that the wetland fill is easily removed. Having considered the record, and after oral argument, we are of opinion that the Pyes have standing to bring their suit, and we vacate and remand.
Before discussing the question of standing, it is well that we recount some principal facts.
The Pyes’ property is adjacent to the property on which the wetland fill at issue here is located. Their property also is adjacent to Area M on which is located the remains of the ante-bellum Hayne Plantation. It also adjoins the African-American cemetery and probably includes a part of the cemetery. Both the remains of the plantation and the African-American cemetery are eligible for inclusion in the National Register of Historic Places.
Area M and the cemetery are located only somero of a mile off of U.S. 17, a major coastal highway.
On August 12, 1996, the Fish and Wildlife Service of the Department of the Interior advised the Corps that the proposed permit “not be authorized without Service concurrence that the activity is not likely to affect federally protected species.” The Fish and Wildlife Service was of opinion that the entire Sheppard tract be considered “the action area of the project.” It took that position because it was “concerned about the secondary impacts of development within the 750.02-acre tract that may ensue as a result of improved access.” That letter stated that the public notice did not clearly describe what type of development would occur at the site and recommended that “to avoid piece-mealing project development, we recommend that all project plans be reviewed up front to determine compliance with state and federal regulations. We recommend that a wetland master plan be prepared and submitted to the source agencies for further review.” It opposed issuance of the permit until its listed agencies were addressed. The Corps never addressed that position.
The ante-bellum plantation site and the African-American cemetery site are both within a few hundred feet of the road which is the issue here. There was evidence aplenty in the district court, in the Garrow Report, that a significant part of the historical value of both the African-American cemetery and the Hayne plantation site was that neither, because of their location, had been subject to marauders:
Feeling [in finding a rural historic landscape] incorporates all of the above attributes. A general test for feeling is whether the site or district could serve as a teaching example, without the need to ignore major post-occupational changes. The feeling of the proposed district is very strong; it is one of the few tracts in the county with well-preserved remains from the planter’s house, slave settlement, upland fields, rice fields, and associated infrastructure*466 without alteration by post-bellum or modern occupation or use.
(A. Part 1, p. 68 with respect to the Hayne Plantation.)
The cemetery also is a good example of a distinctive, regionally important type of cemetery. The African American tradition of grave decorations/grave goods was strongly followed, and most of these goods have been preserved beneath recently developed topsoil. The site has not undergone the disturbance or removal of grave goods that commonly occurs as part of a misguided effort to “clean up” a burial ground. The cemetery can serve as a well-preserved example of a community cemetery of rural African Americans who followed a well-entrenched set of rules regarding burial customs. The cemetery was apparently not linked to a specific church, as were many later African American cemeteries, and it was not a single-family cemetery. Rural African American cemeteries of the antebellum and postbellum periods were once a common element of the Southern landscape, but many have been lost from memory, removed, or impacted by development or logging. As a cemetery that embodies the distinctive characteristics of the Sea Coast African American type, site 38CH1590 is recommended as eligible under Criterion C.
(A. Part 1, p. 79-80 with respect to the African-American cemetery.)
We also note that the County commenced with proposing Area M for an ash dump and both improving and paving the road to U.S. 17. As opposition developed, it changed the proposed use to a dirt mine and later changed the proposed use to a dog-training facility. The degree of improvement of the road was changed from a paved road merely to an improved road. The Corps has described the project as “to improve an existing roadway and to make it an all-weather road.”
Despite the fact of objections to the Corps’ lack of addressing the impact of the road on the wetlands of the entire Sheppard tract and the effect of improved and easier access to the historical sites, the Corps addressed neither prior to issuing the permit, choosing instead to confine its consideration to what it calls “the footprint,” which is the actual fill of the wetland area, only without regard to any of the surrounding countryside, except, perhaps, Area M.
II.
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo. Marshall v. Meadows,
A.
To demonstrate standing at the summary judgment stage, a plaintiff must set forth evidence of an injury in fact in addition to that provided in the complaint, which will be taken as true for purposes of deciding the motion. Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
In this context, both our decisions and decisions of the Supreme Court indicate that adjacent landowners often have standing to challenge the government’s failure to follow statutorily prescribed procedures so long as this failure impairs a separate concrete interest of the plaintiff. See Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
Such a holding is not unique to this Circuit, moreover. The Third Circuit has held that a group of residents living in the historic district of Society Hill in Philadelphia had standing to challenge Housing and Urban Development’s grant to the city to build a hotel and parking garage in the residents’ neighborhood. See Society Hill Towers Owners’ Association v. Rendell,
We think the Pyes have demonstrated an injury comparable to the injuries demonstrated by the Waterford and Society Hill Towers plaintiffs. The Pyes are not only in the vicinity of the proposed action, but are adjacent landowners. The Keeper has designated adjoining and what is probably a portion of their land as eligible for listing on the National Register along with the individual site contained in the Sheppard Tract. Most importantly, however, the eligible African American cemetery abuts directly the Pyes’ land, and probably overlaps it. Therefore, the challenged action may lead to trespassing, vandalism, and looting of historic sites not only on the Sheppard Tract, but also to the historic site on the Pye property. The Pyes are the people most directly affected by the challenged action, and if they do not have standing, to see that the government complies with the regulatory provisions, then the National Historic Preservation Act’s requirement for consideration of the effect of federal permits on historic places is merely a “procedural calisthenic.” We decline to so hold.
The Corps endeavors to undermine the concreteness of the Pyes’ injury by arguing that any development by the County is speculative and that the construction project itself will not actually destroy any of these historic sites. The Corps’ arguments in this regard are unavailing, however. It is abundantly clear from the record that the county wishes to use this 750 acre parcel for something. At different times the County has planned a borrow pit, an ash dump, and a canine training center. The road construction is but the first step in future development by the County. No reason is advanced that this road will remain a road to nowhere for long. We cannot say that future development enabled by the Corps’ permit is so speculative as to render the Pyes’ allegations of injury abstract.
Similarly, that the proposed project will not actually touch any of the historic sites
Finally, the fact that the Pyes’ aesthetic concerns pertaining to the integrity and cohesiveness of the historic district and individual sites are also widely held by the populace of the County does not render them any less concrete and particularized as to the Pyes. The Supreme Court has held that aesthetic and environmental injuries can constitute an injury in fact sufficient to support a plaintiffs standing. See Friends of the Earth, Inc. v. Laidlaw Envtl. Servs. (TOC), Inc.,
In light of the foregoing, we are of opinion that the Pyes have alleged sufficiently concrete injuries to establish the first prong of the standing inquiry.
B.
Because the Pyes established an injury in fact, we turn to a prudential
The purpose of the National Historic Preservation Act is to remedy the dilemma that “historic properties significant to the Nation’s heritage are being lost or substantially altered, often inadvertently, with increasing frequency.” 16 U.S.C. § 470(b)(3). To remedy this problem, the Act prescribes the section 470f process, which requires federal agencies with the authority to license an undertaking “to take into account the effect of the undertaking on any ... site ... that is ... eligible for inclusion in the National Register” prior to issuing the license. 16 U.S.C. § 470f. In particular, the statute’s regulations expressly provide that members of the public interested in the impacts of a federal license on an historic property are to have a reasonable opportunity to participate in the section 470f procedures. 36 C.F.R. § 800.1(a), 800.2(c)(4), (d)(1). The Corps’ own regulations pursuant to the National Historic Preservation Act require it to “take into account the effects, if any, of proposed undertakings on the historic properties both within and beyond the waters of the U.S.” 33 C.F.R. pt. 325 app. C(2)(a) (emphasis added). And we note that that regulation just mentioned authorizes the Corps to condition the permit so as to minimize harm to the historic sites, which seems to have been overlooked in this case.
In this case, the Pyes have asserted an interest directly targeted by the National Historic Preservation Act and its regulations. As adjacent, and probably actual, property owners, they are members of the public concerned with the impact of the Nationwide Permit 14 on a historic site next to and on their property and want to ensure that the Corps takes into account the effects of the improved road on that site. Additionally, the Pyes’ claims are similar to the plaintiffs’ claims in Society Hill Towers, which the Third Circuit found were asserted within the zone of interests covered by the National Historic Preservation Act. See Society Hill Towers,
Thus, the National Historic Preservation Act is aimed at the preservation of areas like the sites here, the African-American cemetery and the Hayne plantation, and expressly provides for interested members of the public to participate in the permitting process when those areas may be affected by agency action. See 36 C.F.R. § 800.2(d)(1). As such, we conclude that the Pyes’ claims are within the zone of interests protected by the National Historic Preservation Act.
C.
Plaintiffs must also show that their injury is fairly traceable to the defendant’s conduct. Steel Co.,
Plaintiffs’ injury is caused by the improved road, not the existing road, and but for the improvements on the road authorized by the Corps’ permit, the injuries the Pyes complain of, an increased probability of looting and destruction of cohesion in the area, have less probability of occurring. The improvements must facilitate access, otherwise the County would not want them. If access is facilitated for the County, it will also facilitate access for other persons, including looters. The Trinkley affidavit provided evidence that linked looting with access to historic sites. While this evidence itself is sufficient to establish causation, the Pyes’ injury is also directly traceable to the Corps’ conduct because the Corps failed to consider the Pyes’ input on the road improvements as required by the National Historic Preservation Act. See Watt v. Energy Action Educ. Found.,
D.
Lastly, the Pyes must also show that the court can redress their injury with the requested relief in this case. Steel Co.,
The National Historic Preservation Act Section 470f regulations give the Pyes an affirmative right to participate in the permitting process as consulting parties. 36 C.F.R. § 800.2(c)(6), (d)(1). The Army Corps is required to “take into account” the effects of the issuance of the permit on historic sites prior to making its final decision. 16 U.S.C. § 470f. In evaluating these effects, the Corps must seek the views of interested parties, including the Pyes and the Advisory Council, in (1) identifying historic properties potentially affected by granting the permit, (2) assessing whether those resources will be adversely affected by granting the permit, and (3) seeking ways to avoid and reduce harm to the affected resources. 36 C.F.R. §§ 800.4(a)(3), ’ 800.5(a)(1-2)(vii), 800.5(d)(2). While the Pyes allege concerns about future development, they also raise concerns about the effect of the improved road itself, including the looting and destruction of the area’s cohesiveness that would be considered if the Corps followed the National Historic Preservation Act’s mandates. Thus, we may redress the Pyes’ injury by requiring the Corps to comply with the procedures required by the National Historic Preservation Act.
III.
We do not address the Pyes’ additional argument for standing as private attorneys general because we find that the plaintiffs have standing on other grounds.
IV.
The Pyes have adequately and amply established that they have been injured by the actions of the Corps in a concrete and particular way, that they are within the zone of interests served by the National Historic Preservation Act, and that their grievances are likely to be redressed by a favorable decision in this case. Therefore, the Pyes have demonstrated standing to bring the underlying suit, and we so hold.
The judgment of the district court is vacated and the case remanded for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
VACATED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. We take judicial notice that Highway U.S. 17 is a major coastal high-way running at least from Florida to Virginia through South Carolina.
. The Clean Water Act prohibits the discharge of dredge or fill material into the waters of the United States, which include wetlands, without a permit from the Corps. 33 U.S.C. § 1344 (1994); 33 C.F.R. § 328.3(a), (b) (1998).
. "A monofill is a landfill which only accepts municipal waste combustion ash.” Denise L. Stoker, Note, The Burning Dilemma of Incinerator Ash Disposal: City of Chicago v. Environmental Defense Fund, 3 Wis. Envtl. L.J. 67, 70 n. 13 (1996) (citing Haia K. Roffman, Monofill, in The Encyclopedia of the Environment, 458 (Ruth A. Eblen & William R. Eblen eds., 1994)).
.A dirt borrow pit is a pit used to supply earth for filling or embanking projects. See C. Conrad Claus, Oregon’s Development of Absolute Liability Under the Rylands Doctrine: A Case Study, 53 Wash. U.J. Urb. & Contemp. L. 171, 196 n. 162 (1998) (citing Webster’s Third New International Dictionary of the English Language 257 (3d ed.1993)).
. The "footprint” of the area to be filled consists only of the actual 100 foot stretch of road
. We note that we do not hold in this case that the violation of a procedural duty is enough to confer standing on an adjacent landowner per se. Here there is a concrete injury from the completion of the proposed project separate from the failure of the government agency to undertake its duties. As we have shown, the Pyes have met this requirement.
. We note that the plaintiffs need not show that the result of the agency's deliberations will be different if the statutory procedure is followed. See Akins,
