Posts Tagged ‘Bastrop convention center’

Farm St. work added to new Bastrop convention center project plans by council

Monday, January 11th, 2010

Bastrop, Tx–Without taking a formal vote today, the city council agreed to include some street, drainage and utility improvements on Farm Street as part of the convention center construction project. The likely added cost will be about $430,000 and can mostly be financed with hotel room tax revenue, said Bastrop City Manager Mike Talbot.

Even with the additional work, civic center construction will remain well within its projected budget, Talbot said. Final bid tabulations for building the civic center and a new city hall are still being reviewed, but the total cost will be roughly $1 million less than the $8.8 million planning estimate, Talbot told the council at their Monday session.

The council expects to discuss selecting the winning bid or bids when it meets at 6 p.m. Jan. 12 at City Hall. Bids were opened last week.

A section of Farm Street between Gills Branch and the Union Pacific rail line is slated for the upgrades after residents along the street complained about potholes, narrow pavement, heavy traffic and a lack of sidewalks in the neighborhood. The comments came as the council discussed rezoning the civic center site which faces Chestnut Street. Council Member Bill Peterson, who has been studying the city’s capital improvement needs, called the Farm Street work “a top priority” among possible projects.

Farm Street marks the northern boundary of the convention center project with a parking lot entry/exit. The street is already a main east-west route between Texas 95 and Fisherman’s Park, said Peterson. Mina Elementary School and the Bastrop school district’s central administration offices are also on Farm Street, adding to the traffic load, said Mayor Terry Orr.

Borrowing process begins for new city hall, convention center construction

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

Bastrop, Tx– The Bastrop City Council began the final process Oct. 27 for borrowing roughly $5 million to complete construction of a new city hall and convention center on Chestnut St. beginning early next year. When the council met Tuesday it authorized the publication of notice that Bastrop plans to issue debt to complete financing for the new projects which have been in the planning stages for more than two years.

In an interview Oct. 28 Bastrop City Manager Mike Talbot said the final bond issue amounts will not be determined until later this year after the city opens construction bids for the two projects Dec. 8 and and awards a contract before Christmas. Late last year the city borrowed initial money for the projects, chiefly to cover final engineering and design costs.

Construction of the new municipal builings should begin early in 2010.

Bastrop convention center, museum plan move forward

Monday, March 23rd, 2009

Bastrop, Tx–Council Member Julie Hart used a March 20 budget review session by the city council to renew her objections to moving ahead this year with construction of a convention and civic center on Chestnut Street. However, she failed to sway other members of the council.

She suggested a convention center might fare better in two or three years once the city has a marketing plan in place and hotels available convenient to the facility. Absent those conditions, “are we getting ahead of ourselves?” she asked.
Council Member Willie DeLaRosa argued that the council agreed in January 2008 to build the planned convention center. “It’s amazing to me that we’re still talking about it,” he said.

Council Member Joe Beal voiced a similar sentiment. “I thought we’d made that decision and are moving forward,” he said. Alluding to a five-year revenue and expense projection presented by City Manager Mike Talbot earlier in the meeting Beal added, “It’s feasible (to fund and open a convention center). The (financial) numbers show we will not be imprudent” in forging ahead.

The present plan is designed to boost visitor traffic in Bastrop, especially in the historic downtown area, said Mayor Terry Orr. “The prosperity of this town very much depends on bringing people in in a major way,” he said.

Hart suggested the convention center will provide little stimulus if it sits unused for a significant period because marketing plans and related facilities are not in place.

Joe Newman, president of the Bastrop Economic Development Corp., said developers are already in talks with at least three new hotel prospects interested in sites at the intersection of Texas 95 and Texas 71, in part because the location is convenient to the planned convention center.

Talbot said the city could sell bonds to complete financing of the project in the next two months, a convention center manager could be hired about the same time and construction could be underway as early as mid year.

“We’re still moving forward,” said Orr.