Tag: Tyler Gahagan

  • New Citrus Heights city hall construction ahead of schedule

    City Hall, Citrus Heights
    A photo taken on April 27, 2016, shows progress on the new city hall in Citrus Heights. // CH Sentinel

    City officials say construction work on the new 35,000-square-feet city hall in Citrus Heights is running on budget and ahead of schedule, with plans for a public grand opening and dedication ceremony currently underway.

    In an interview this week, Project Manager Tyler Gahagan estimated the hall will be completed by mid-August, as contrasted with a prior estimated date of completion being mid-September. He credited the project’s speed to a combination of weather not getting in the way of anything critical, crews working faster than anticipated, and overall “getting aggressive with the schedule.”

    Most recently, Gahagan said crews began installing exterior windows, with an adjacent 4,000-square-feet utility yard erected mid-April. He said framing inside the new hall is almost complete and crews are currently hanging drywall and painting inside.

    The new hall will also feature about 5,000 square feet of solar panels on the roof, with half of them already installed, according to Gahagan. He said the panels won’t be able to power the whole building, but will help supplement power and keep the building more energy efficient.

    The project manager said landscape preparation and grading will begin after exterior windows have all been installed, in order to avoid dust entering the building. Landscaping will include a “large water feature on the plaza, sizable art display at the main entrance of the building and a small rose garden and water feature on the south-east corner of the building near the community rooms,” according to an update provided to The Sentinel last week by the city manager’s office.

    During an April 28 city council meeting, Councilman Mel Turner said he had recently taken a tour through the new hall and called the building “over-the-top impressive.”

    The city manager’s office said based on the current construction schedule, and barring unexpected delays, the City is “tentatively scheduled to take occupancy of the new hall in early August.” A grand opening and dedication ceremony is expected to be announced at a future date.

    [Related: Drawing shows what new city hall will look like when complete]

    The $22 million new city hall was approved in March 2015, along with a new medical office building to be constructed in place of the old city hall on Fountain Square Drive and Greenback Lane. Groundbreaking on the new medical building is anticipated sometime in May, according to the City.

  • Aerial photo shows progress on new Citrus Heights city hall

    Citrus Heights city hall
    An aerial shot, taken on Jan. 23, 2016, shows progress on the new Citrus Heights city hall project on Fountain Square Drive. Credit: Rod Johnson, Capital Partners Development Co.

    An aerial photo released this week shows progress on the new Citrus Heights city hall, currently being constructed on Fountain Square Drive just north of the Post Office.

    The image, taken by a drone on Jan. 23 and released by developer Rod Johnson of Capital Partners Development Company, shows the general shape of the new building’s curved design, roof in place, and outline of parking areas. Johnson said the project is “on track” and “on budget” for completion later this year.

    [Related: Drawing shows what new city hall will look like when complete]

    The new hall will feature a 35,000-square-foot design and an adjacent 4,000-square-foot utility yard, all located on a 10.9-acre parcel about a block away from the old city hall property.

    As previously reported on The Sentinel, construction of the new $22 million city hall is expected to be completed by September of this year, according to Project Manager Tyler Gahagan, with Ascent Builders.

    For additional context on the city hall project and related medical office building project, see story: Citrus Heights city hall ‘on target’ for completion by September”

  • Citrus Heights city hall ‘on target’ for completion by September

    New Citrus Heights city hall, in progress
    An in-progress view of the new Citrus Heights city hall, taken on Jan. 21, 2016. // CH Sentinel

    Updated Jan. 22, 9:44 a.m.–
    Construction of the new $22 million Citrus Heights city hall is “on target” for completion by September of this year, according to the project’s manager and City officials.

    After beginning work on the project last July, Project Manager Tyler Gahagan said structural steel went in earlier this month, followed by a roof being put on the 35,000-square-foot facility last week. Currently, he said crews have started metal stud framing and are installing plumbing and electrical.

    Gahagan said some site work had been slowed down by rain, which caused cement trucks to slip and slide in the mud, but he said the new hall is on track for completion by mid-September.

    The new hall features a single-story design, along with an adjacent 4,000-square-foot utility yard. Its new location is on a 10.9-acre parcel just north of the post office on Fountain Square Drive, about a block away from where the old city hall was located.

    Approved unanimously by councilmembers last March, the new hall project included authorization for Dignity Health to construct a three-story medical office building in place of the old city hall, at the corner of Fountain Square Drive and Greenback Lane. Demolition of the former hall was completed in November, and a groundbreaking ceremony for the new hall was held in July of last year.

    [Related: Citrus Heights leaders break ground on new city hall project]

    According to Monica Alejandrez, who serves as assistant to the city manager, Panattoni Development submitted plans for the new 68,727-square-foot medical building, but a specific start date is unknown. She estimated construction would begin in spring of this year.

    On its website, the City calls the new hall and medical building project “a unique public-private-partnership,” which it says will generate more than 170 jobs and result in a “direct investment of $53.2 million into the Citrus Heights economy.”

    [Image: Click to see official drawing of what the new city hall will look like when complete]

    The new single-story hall will house 65 city employees, who were previously stationed in four separate buildings at the old hall. Staff are currently located in a temporary city hall facility being leased in the Grand Oaks Shopping Center on Auburn Boulevard. The hall was moved in July 2015 to allow for demolition work to begin.

    Background

    The new city hall project caused some controversy among residents during discussion tracing back to 2013, with concerns about increased traffic, construction noise, and whether a new hall was needed. Supporters, like the Citrus Heights Chamber of Commerce and city council members, billed the project as good for jobs and a cost-efficient way to replace an aging hall without incurring debt.

    [Related: Council votes 5-0 for new city hall & MOB; lawsuit threatened]

    The city manager’s office previously released figures saying the net impact of the new hall to the City’s general fund would only be about $8.9 million after 15 years, largely due to a $6.9 million lease agreement with Dignity Health for use of the old hall grounds, as well as projected energy savings from a new, more efficient city hall facility.

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    A lawsuit filed by the group Preserve Our Civic Center is still ongoing against the project, with a Sacramento Superior Court hearing scheduled for April 1, 2016. Norman Hill, a representative for the group, said the lawsuit seeks to stop the project from moving forward, due to alleged violations of the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA).
    Hill said a "key" issue involved in the lawsuit regards traffic impact from the new medical building and city hall, a "major impact" he believes was "concealed" from the public, in violation of CEQA. Prior requests for comment from city officials regarding the lawsuit have been referred to Ruthann Ziegler, the city attorney for Citrus Heights. Ziegler replied Wednesday afternoon to a Sentinel request seeking the City's perspective and response to the lawsuit, as well as if progress had been delayed on the project due to the lawsuit. In a short email statement, she said "progress on both the MOB and the new city hall is continuing," but did not comment on the lawsuit. [Related: Judge denies motion to halt Citrus Heights city hall demolition] Last July, Judge Timothy Frawley denied a motion from Hill's group which sought to temporarily bar the City of Citrus Heights from proceeding with plans to demolish the old city hall. Although that attempt was unsuccessful, Hill said he's hopeful "some kind of compromise settlement" can be reached with the City through the legal process, but said specifics couldn't be addressed due to the ongoing nature of the lawsuit.