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2002 |
First
high school bid is below estimate
The first bid for work on the
new Sisters High School came in $111,658 below the contractor's estimate.
Elting, Inc. of Gladstone,
Oregon, bid $367,900 for mass excavation and grading at the school site.
The contractor's estimate for that work was $479,558.
The low bid amount is good
news to the school district, because the school board had to cut $500,000
worth of features from the school plan to keep within its $21 million
budget.
Savings from low bids could
allow the board to restore cut features. It won't be clear how much can
be restored until the project is completely bid out.
In other business, the school
board rejected an environmental construction certification program that
would have cost the district some $387,000.
The LEED (Leadership in Energy
and Environmental Design) program aims for energy efficient construction
and lower impact on the environment through the use of locally produced
and recycled materials.
Participating in LEED would
have cost at least $82,000 to meet documentation requirements.
Additional "Silver" certification
would have required some $305,000 in additional construction costs, mostly
associated with changes in the HVAC system.
The program might have offset
expenses with long-term energy savings and $320,000 from tax credits if
the school was awarded federal "Silver" certification.
However, architect Scott Steele
could not guarantee that level of certification.
Steele and his colleague Mike
Gorman acknowledged that the current design already incorporates many
of the important aspects of LEED.
The building uses locally
produced materials for the exterior walls.
According to Steele, the existing
design is 21 percent more energy efficient than code requires (a $40,000
savings per year).
LEED enhancements would have
increased energy efficiency by another 5 percent (an $8,500 savings per
year).
The expense was not included
in any budgeting for the project and would have had to come from further
cuts or from contingency funds.
The board was unwilling to
risk the money, especially since it had made cuts to the scope of the
school to stay within budget.
The board voted unanimously
not to seek LEED certification.
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