John Benzinger from Skanska presented the GMP on Monday.
PITTSFIELD,Mass. — The city and Gilbane Building Co. have settled on a guaranteed maximum price for the construction of the new Taconic High School.
The price for construction only is $97,757,373, which is equal to the project established months ago by the state. Now that the bids for the construction are in, Gilbane and the School Building Needs Commission finalized that construction budget, outlining the cost of each item and subcontracts.
"Tonight was a reaffirmation that that was number. Almost two years ago, the [Massachusetts School Building Authority] said this is the number. The City Council when they voted to send the project forward said, yes, that is the number. What we saw here tonight is all of the math that lets us back into that number, which we didn't have when the MSBA approved it," Superintendent Jason McCandless said.
The entire project is budgeted at $120.7 million. The construction was for $97.7 million and now that the bids for that have arrived, construction manager Gilbane can settle on the final price. However, there is still unknown costs such as furnishing the new school.
"Getting the building built, pretty much those bids are out, filling it up with a mixture of equipment we already have and new equipment and furniture, those bids aren't out," McCandless said
Additionally, the bids for electrical work is under protest. John Benzinger of the consulting firm Skanska said Wayne Griffin Electric Co. is challenging the low bidder. Ferguson Electric Co. bid $9,847,000 for the work while Griffin bid $10,400,000. However, Griffin says Ferguson did not fill out the bid documents correctly by not listing any subcontractors and instead only listing itself as the ones performing the work, according to Benzinger.
The city's legal team is working on the appeal now but Skanska is confident the bid will hold up.
"The second lowest bidder is saying that Ferguson didn't submit their paperwork correctly. The difference in price is $550,000 more. If we disqualify Ferguson, we'd be paying $550,000 more than we are for Ferguson," the city's Purchasing Agent Colleen Hunter-Mullett said.
If the appeal does hold up, then Benzinger said there are plans in place to cover the additional cost. The Ferguson bid is what was included in the GMP.
"The whole project budget the MSBA has approved and you have authorized is $120,799,929 and the difference between the two are fees associated with the design, FF&E which the city will have to purchase eventually, moving expenses, [owner's project manager] expenses," Benzinger said.
Under a pre-construction contract, Gilbane was already authorized to execute contracts for site work, concrete, structural steel, plumbing, windows, and masonry, Benzinger said. Monday's authorization allows Gilbane to executive contracts for the rest of construction.
"Everything was competitively bid," Benzinger said.
Also not included in the price was $950,000 for additional soil work. A mix of contaminated soils and unsuitable soils were found on the property because it was both swamp in some areas and a dumping ground for construction debris in other areas. That additional work to mitigate the contamination — and ship the soils to an approved landfill — cost $950,000. That is coming out of the city's contingency budget, which was $4.3 million to start.
The site work is "significantly complete" now. Concrete foundation work is 80 percent done, structural steel will start on Oct. 11 and precast concrete work for the structure will start on Oct. 17.
Receiving and approving that GMP is the first significant milestone in the construction process. The new school is expected to be open in 2018. While the GMP is a milestone, school officials say the construction budget had already been set twice before.
"The MSBA itself really sets a number to draw a line in the sand to say this project is going to serve this many students in this type of school. In our instance, it is a comprehensive school so it has vocational programs included. They lay out a number that their board approves and this body approves, and the City Council approved it," McCandless said.
"This project may not exceed that cost. It may not exceed that cost in anyway shape or form."
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MassDOT Project Will Affect Traffic Near BMC
By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Prepare for traffic impacts around Berkshire Medical Center through May for a state Department of Transportation project to improve situations and intersections on North Street and First Street.
Because of this, traffic will be reduced to one lane of travel on First Street (U.S. Route 7) and North Street between Burbank Street and Abbott Street from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday through Friday through at least May 6.
BMC and Medical Arts Complex parking areas remain open and detours may be in place at certain times. The city will provide additional updates on changes to traffic patterns in the area as construction progresses.
The project has been a few years in the making, with a public hearing dating back to 2021. It aims to increase safety for all modes of transportation and improve intersection operation.
It consists of intersection widening and signalization improvements at First and Tyler streets, the conversion of North Street between Tyler and Stoddard Avenue to serve one-way southbound traffic only, intersection improvements at Charles Street and North Street, intersection improvements at Springside Avenue and North Street, and the construction of a roundabout at the intersection of First Street, North Street, Stoddard Avenue, and the Berkshire Medical Center entrance.
Work also includes the construction of 5-foot bike lanes and 5-foot sidewalks with ADA-compliant curb ramps.
Last year, the City Council approved multiple orders for the state project: five orders of takings for intersection and signal improvements at First Street and North Street.
The total amount identified for permanent and temporary takings is $397,200, with $200,000 allocated by the council and the additional monies coming from carryover Chapter 90 funding. The state Transportation Improvement Plan is paying for the project and the city is responsible for 20 percent of the design cost and rights-of-way takings.
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Because of this, traffic will be reduced to one lane of travel on First Street (U.S. Route 7) and North Street between Burbank Street and Abbott Street from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday through Friday through at least May 6.
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