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Contractors Will Play Key Role in Building, Refurbishing Municipal Facilities

Because of recent funding, rebuilding initiatives related to municipal buildings are receiving more attention than ever, and there will be hundreds of opportunities for private sector firms to help restore historic facilities in 2022.
By Mary Scott Nabers
December 15, 2021
Topics
Markets

Municipal buildings represent the center of government in communities throughout the United States. In almost all cases, town halls and public buildings are esteemed as hallmarks of civic pride. The public assets have a cultural value as well as a functional one, and efforts to renovate, enhance or rebuild them are common.

However, because of recent funding that cities, parishes and townships have received, rebuilding initiatives related to municipal buildings are receiving more attention than ever, and there will be hundreds of opportunities for private sector firms to help restore historic facilities in 2022.

In Florida, a plan to construct a new city hall for Riviera Beach became the lynchpin of an entire municipal redevelopment strategy. Recently, the Riviera Beach City Council voted to fund a municipal redevelopment project that carries an estimated cost of approximately $300 million. City leaders have allocated an initial $1.5 million to get the initiative started. Soon citizens will be able to watch all activities related to the Reimagining Riviera Beach Project online from beginning to end. The actual city hall has a cost estimate of between $50 million and $60 million, but many other new facilities are included in the overall redevelopment plan.

In Stockton, California, city leaders plan to relocate municipal offices into an existing facility that will be renovated and enhanced. Planned improvements of the property known as Waterfront Towers have been assigned a total cost of $63.3 million. The major expenses stem from the eventual purchase of Waterfront Towers for $13.6 million, followed by a $2.7 million budget for the architectural design phase. The construction phase has a $47 million budget allocation.

Council members in Springfield, Ohio, soon will launch a $3 million project to renovate and enhance the City Hall Plaza district. An area where many community events are held. The plan will modernize the area and make it more pedestrian friendly. The project has community support, and planning has been ongoing for years. The objective is to provide a much needed ‘facelift’ to the seat of local government. Funding for the renovation is available through a carve-out from Springfield’s $44.2 million allocation of American Rescue Plan Act money. City officials expect to begin construction in time for completion in 2022 or early 2023.

Local officials in the city of North Liberty, Iowa, recently announced plans for a new and permanent alternative to temporarily leased government offices. A new city hall will be constructed within an existing civic campus. The new building will be constructed near the police and fire department facilities. Along with the new city hall, another construction project will add offices for the city’s administrative, communications, and legal departments. The objective is to centralize all municipal services within the civic campus. Solicitations for contracting partners will begin in 2022.

Another similar project is planned for municipal governance in Lawton, Oklahoma. Councilmembers plan to build new office space throughout three unoccupied floors of the current City Hall. A construction manager for the project has been hired, and city officials announced that $6 million is budgeted for the project. Construction work will begin in 2022.

A new city hall also has been announced for Minot, North Dakota. The building will address a critical need by mitigating extremely cramped conditions in the current municipal facility. The overall project will also include repurposing an old bank building in the downtown area at a cost of approximately $13 million. Officials in Minot hope to secure a construction contract in time to begin work at the site by early 2022.

Various bond results from November elections also affirm the perennial importance of city hall upkeep for the most fundamental units of governance. A large city hall renovation project with expenses totaling in the tens-of-millions of dollars received overwhelming support in Richardson, Texas. The renovation of the community’s City Hall was one of several construction projects included in a bond package that carried a cost of $64 million. Over half of that overall amount will be allocated exclusively for renovations to the city hall.

Projects like these are being announced in America on a weekly basis. Citizen support for the continual upkeep of municipal facilities is obvious. The visual link between governance and the seat of government is important for many reasons—civic pride, cultural and historic preservation, as well as the economic stimulus that result as rebuilding projects are launched. Private sector contractors are advised to monitor current planning efforts to upgrade and expand municipal buildings throughout the country.

by Mary Scott Nabers
Mary Scott Nabers is president and CEO of Strategic Partnerships Inc., a business development company specializing in government contracting and procurement consulting throughout the U.S. Her recently released book, “Inside the Infrastructure Revolution: A Roadmap for Building America,” is a handbook for contractors, investors and the public at large seeking to explore how public-private partnerships or joint ventures can help finance their infrastructure projects.

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