
Brewer’s
$6.75 million
public safety building taking shape
Tuesday, February 5, 2008
Anyone who has walked into the public safety facility on South Main
Street, which is shared by the city’s police and fire departments, has
seen that the quarters are tight.
To solve the space problem, a new $6.75 million public safety
building is under construction on Parkway South.
The walls to the new two-building facility are now framed, with
officers and firefighters expected to move into their new home in
October — or sooner — Police Chief Perry Antone said Monday.
Referring to how cramped the departments are now at the South Main
Street building, Antone said 22 people were working out of just 2,200
square feet of space. Over the years, the deteriorating building, which
was built in 1958, also has served as the municipal court and at one
time had prisoner holding cells.
Local construction firm Nickerson & O'Day and WBRC
Architects-Engineers of Bangor are the design-build team working on the
new multilevel facility, which will be approximately 30,000 square feet
and situated on 3 acres across from Liberty Drive and adjacent to
Interstate 395.
The site provides good access to major roadways, which should make
response times shorter, and it is located next to the high school and
just down the street from the Brewer Community School, a new
elementary-middle school that is scheduled to open in 2010.
The new public safety facility will actually be two connected
buildings — one that looks like an old colonial home on the right side
of the site, which will have shared space for the two departments; and a
warehouse-style fire station on the left with living space for
firefighters on the second level.
The framing of the first building was completed in the fall, but the
firehouse portion recently was put up and the final braces were welded
together on Monday, said Kevin Gresser, project manager for Nickerson &
O'Day.
"We’re quite a ways into the structural phase, and about to begin
exterior sheathing," he said.
The three-story colonial structure has been completely enclosed in
tarp to protect workers from the elements, which also has allowed them
to pour cement for the flooring. A third level of flooring will be
poured Wednesday.
"We’re also going to be starting, behind the tarp, some interior
framing," Gresser said. "That’s a few week out."
The interior for the three-story building has separate space for each
department, with some shared areas.
Once the facility is complete, both the police and fire departments
will have significantly more space, Antone said.
"We’re looking at about 12,000-square feet" for the police
department, he said. "It’s extremely exciting. It’s just going to help
us be more efficient at what we do."
For example, "there will be work stations to accommodate every
officer that’s working at one time," he said. Currently, officers have
shared-use computers set up in one room which also is used as a
conference room, interview room, storage area and lunch room.
The fire department and ambulance crews are now crammed into the
space above the firetruck bays at the South Main Street facility.
The new structure is a design-build project, which allows flexibility
because the builder works hand-in-hand with the designer to overcome and
brainstorm on any project obstacles, said City Engineer Frank Higgins,
who is the city’s project manager.
"There are areas here we’re still designing," he said. "The nice part
of [design-build] is it gets your building built a lot quicker. We
really have to all pull in the same direction."
However, piecing the facility together requires constant attention
and communication.
"It’s a process that requires a lot of cooperation," Higgins said.
"They [the design-build team] really stepped up to make it work, and
we’re really happy with how things have gone."
U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Rural Development program has
allocated a $6.5 million community facility direct loan for Brewer,
which is a low-interest loan designated for the project.
"Everyone that I’ve spoken to is very excited about the building and
acknowledge that it’s long overdue," City Manager Steve Bost said.
Antone couldn’t agree more.
"Now that they’ve got both sides started, you can start to see the
layout," he said. "I think it’s going to be gorgeous. It’s exactly what
we had hoped for."
A copyright story from the Bangor
Daily News, Tuesday, February 5, 2008.
Photo Credit****Nickerson
& O'Day employees and sub contractors work on one of the two buildings
that will be the new home of the Brewer Public Safety department. The
project is expected to be complete by mid October of this year. The
buildings will replace the Main Street facility that has been in use for
over 50 years. (Bangor Daily News/Gabor Degre) |