Final decision: Bus barn to be located at former AEA site

  Comments (...)
Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

Flynn said he would like to see the bus barn moved to the former AEA site for safety reasons and because he likes seeing the school campus open.

Currently, some buses go north to the elementary/middle school in the afternoon while the rest go south to the high school. In the morning and afternoon, however, all the buses must make an extra trip through the high school parking lot to reach the bus barn. Moving the bus barn would cut back on 13 buses driving through the high school lot twice a day.

Other suggestions

There were other suggestions as well, such as purchasing the land for sale surrounding the elementary/middle school or trading land with Southwestern Community College. Neither of those options were attractive to the boardmembers.

Dunphy suggested moving the building slightly west or south of the original site to improve safety at the curb, while maintaining the infrastructure.

Delay

Making a final decision was getting down to the wire for the Creston School Board in terms of cost and time.

“Until we pick out a site and say we’re going here, or here, or where we’re going, we really don’t know what it’s going to cost us,” said Flynn.

Creston Schools interim Superintendent Chuck Scott said he spoke with Tom Stockdale, Vice President of Estimating and Pre-Construction with TC3, and Stockdale explained that after a decision has been made, the construction company will need two months for drawings and bid documents and to get bids back in, and then to expect six months for construction.

Money talk

Creston Schools will receive $400,000 from insurance and will have to pay the remaining amount for the building.

The bus barn will cost $70,000 to build at the AEA site. It will also cost $230,000 for the building to be in an east/west orientation, or $297,000 in a north/south orientation.

To place the garage at the original site would have cost $157,000.

“That $70,000 is in addition to the metal building as described and that we’ve looked at for a long time,” said Dunphy.

Dunphy said the $70,000 would include things such as building a masonry wall, utilities and asphault removal.

Comments

Total Comments
0

View/Add Comments

There have been no comments made about this story.

Reader Poll

Which social media website do you use most?

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest
Other

Top Ads