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The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here.
©
2002 Display
Advertising The
contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
New
library, city hall seem likely despite some problems Within
a few years, three new public buildings may stand on the three-acre site
that now holds the former Sisters Middle School.
Two of the three possibilities
are fairly certain -- a library and a city hall. The third, a new school
administration building, is contingent upon several factors including
a study of the cost of renovating the old brick high school building.
All of the projects face obstacles,
however. Controversy is simmering over two aspects of the library plan,
both related to a decision to base a new Sisters Library building on one
built in La Pine five years ago.
On the recommendation of Deschutes
Public Library District Director Michael Gaston, the district board last
July awarded a contract for designing a new Sisters Library to Rich Turi,
a Coos Bay architect who designed the La Pine library. He also designed
a new library for Florence on the Oregon coast a few years ago while Gaston
was director of the Siuslaw library district.
The Bulletin of Bend published
a front-page story on the contract September 29, focusing on the fact
that the Deschutes library board approved the contract after exempting
itself from the standard state requirement that public projects be put
out for bid. While legal authorities say the law permits such exemptions
in certain circumstances, some local architects are unhappy with the process.
On a related matter, some
Sisters area residents with strong interest in the library have been grumbling
about the idea of adopting any type of replica of the La Pine library.
Their voices may grow louder now that a library site has been acquired
and attention will turn to design.
In The Bulletin account, Gaston
defended his decision relative to Turi on grounds of economy. He said
the exemption from public bidding was justified because the board plans
to base the design of the Sisters Library on the plan of the La Pine building,
which is a design Turi has copyrighted.
This should provide savings
on architectural and engineering fees, Gaston explained.
The prospective new city hall
has stimulated no controversy but faces a conventional obstacle -- financing.
City Administrator Eileen Stein says there is no dissent within the city
council from the idea that the city should have a new headquarters.
"And if it were up to my staff,
we'd be out tomorrow," she added with a chuckle.
The city had been planning
to use a two-story building it purchased from Multnomah Publishers for
this purpose, but that plan was sidetracked by the discovery that it would
cost too much to bring the building into compliance with access requirements
of the Americans with Disabilities Act.
Stein said she'd like to maintain
the same rough timetable the city had been working on with respect to
the Multnomah building. That would put city workers in a new office building
by the end of next year.
The city has been building
up a "city hall remodeling fund" with the Multnomah building in mind,
but Stein said that now "it is my plan to use that fund to pay for the
land purchase (from the school district)."
That purchase, for $291,600,
will deplete much of the remodeling fund.
A significant share of the
needed money might be realized from sales of the Multnomah building and
the current city hall property at the corner of Fir Street and Main Avenue.
Stein has no firm estimate
of the size or cost of a new city hall, but says she is thinking in terms
of about 5,000 square feet in a building that would run between $500,000
and $750,000. An architect will be hired to analyze space needs.
"It really just depends on
pulling together a funding package for a new building," Stein said. "There
is no disagreement on the need to get out of this building." |
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