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Dateline: October 25,
2001
Work
begins on courthouse project
Roger
Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
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A
worker from Phoenix 1 removes plaster from the walls of the 1890
courthouse.
Enterprise
Digital Photo |
The
sounds of jackhammers filled the square last Thursday as work began on the
restoration of the 1890 Donley County Courthouse.
Commissioners
met in called session October 17 and approved a $2.78 million contract
with Phoenix 1 Restoration and Construction of Dallas. The signing follows
months of negotiations as the contractor, the county, its architects, and
the Texas Historical Commission worked together to bring the cost down
after the only bid came in $1 million over budget.
Phoenix’s
project manager Dwight Smith says the concrete removal, foundation work,
and plaster removal will be the first objectives his six-man team will
tackle.
The
concrete steps and porch of the building’s main entrance were history by
last Friday. Smith says this week workers will be drilling 30-foot holes
for new 30-inch concrete piers, which will anchor the tower and its new
third story. Existing foundations for the tower only go four feet below
grade.
Inside
the building, workers are taking plaster off the walls and removing doors
to be refinished.
Smith
is excited about the local job and has worked on courthouse restorations
in Rockwell and Ellis counties.
“I
think it’s going to be a great project,” Smith said. “People I’ve
met in town have been cordial and very nice. We’re looking forward to a
successful project.”
Several
items had to be given up in order for the Donley project to go forward.
Rehabilitation and replacement of the exterior sandstone was the single
costliest item to be deleted from the project. That work would have cost
an estimated $250,000. The stonework can still be done at a future time
and might be added back into the project if the county can get the funds
donated.
Project
architect Chris Hutson said the stonework would not have been deleted, but
the contractor assured his office that the building could still be sealed
from moisture and the masonry repointed without replacing the faulty
stones.
Several
other job options were also deleted but are not expected to impact the
historic nature of the building nor prevent it from being used as a modern
courthouse.
The
county also found other creative ways to save money. For example, the
concrete debris from the steps and other areas was originally to have been
hauled off to a landfill. The county instead plans to use that rubble as
fill on a bridge project, thus saving landfill fees. Plaster rubble will
similarly be re-used by the county.
John
Kiehl of the Panhandle Regional Planning Commission is administering the
grant for the county and says the project is being carried out in the most
cost-effective manner possible, despite the opinions of some local
residents.
“The
county has pursued every savings avenue possible in an effort to keep this
project in line with the original estimates,” Kiehl said in a fax to the
Enterprise. “Unfortunately, the bid the county had to work with exceeded
those estimates by roughly $1 million, and only through diligent efforts
has the county been able to cut that overage by nearly 75 percent.
Kiehl
says the project at completion will cost the county $67.80 per square
foot, which he says is a bargain compared to other courthouse
restorations.
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