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Duke City Heats Up
by K. Robert Wendel
Downtown is sizzling and the west side is heating up as city
redevelopment efforts on Central Avenue begin to pay off.
Demand for housing in the Duke City also remains strong.
The city finished 2003 with 20 percent more construction starts
than in 2002, with nearly $350 million in projects. Work in
the private sector also is picking up, especially in the multi
housing and retail markets.
"Overall, the construction sector in Albuquerque is looking
good," said Larry Waldman, a senior economist at the
Bureau of Business and Economic Research at the University
of New Mexico in Albuquerque. "We are showing a slow-growing
construction sector, but it is growing."
The city is in the hunt for a proposed 10,000-seat arena in
downtown. Plans call for the estimated $48.5 million project
to be financed by a combination of private equity, the cash
flow generated by the arena and a 10 percent surcharge on
tickets.
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The new 10,000-seat facility will be located south of the
convention center, north of Central Avenue and between the
railroad tracks and Second Avenue. The architecturally significant
structure will rise 60 -ft. above grade and feature an urbane,
pedestrian friendly façade at the Central Avenue gateway
to downtown.
A preliminary development team includes Hunt Construction,
Arena Management & Construction, LLC, Comcast-Spectator,
Inc. and Historic District Improvement Co.
Lofts continue to be a hot project in downtown after the renovation
of the old Albuquerque High School by Paradigm Development
and Richardson and Richardson Construction, both of Albuquerque.
Bradbury Stamm, a local general contractor, is also currently
working on a high-end apartment project near the Rio Grande
River where the old Huning Castle used to stand.
"There is a lot of concentration in the downtown area
because of the revitalization program," said Marissa
Rodriguez, a research manager for Albuquerque Economic Development
office. >> "We are also seeing a lot of big-box
industrial on the Interstate 40 corridor and there is also
a lot of spec being built."
Housing on the west side continues to keep both builders and
developers busy, but the city is also moving forward on an
aggressive plan to attract more high-tech and aerospace work.
AUI Inc. of Albuquerque recently started the first phase of
more than $9 million of infrastructure work at an 300-acre
Aerospace Technology Park on the west side near Double Eagle
II Airport. The first phase is part of a total $35 million
package for the site.
The city hopes to work off synergies developed by Eclipse
Aviation, which plans to begin manufacturing a small and economical
business jet by 2009 in Albuquerque.
"Right now Eclipse Aviation is looking at 2,000 jobs
at its facility and we are hoping to encourage a lot of its
suppliers to locate at the aerospace technology park,"
said Jim Hinde, Albuquerque's aviation planner.
Funded by the city, AUI will install infrastructure and utilities,
with the bulk of the work scheduled for completion this year.
Roadway and storm-drainage improvements will be installed
by 2007-2008.
At UNM, parts of the $130 million, 475,000-sq.-ft. Children's
Hospital and critical-care area at the University of New Mexico
are starting to enter the pipeline. The pavilion will house
UNM Children's Hospital and operating rooms; neonatal intensive-care
unit; children's emergency department; adult emergency department,
urgent care and trauma; adult critical care; and the women's
birthing center, postpartum service and well-baby nursery.
Other big-ticket projects include a 180,000-sq.-ft. second
phase of the Cancer Research Facility at UNM. The freestanding,
multilevel building has a projected budget of $37.8 million,
but no funding has yet been allocated.
UNM is also planning a new, 130,000-sq.-ft. research institute.
Planning, design and construction are estimated at $40 million,
but is not funded.
Big things are afoot at Sandia Labs, which is gearing up for
the next phase of the silicon revolution. General contractor
M.A. Mortenson of Texas started work in June on the first
building in the Microsystems Engineering Sciences Application
program, or MESA.
The 98,000-sq.-ft. project will provide clean rooms to replace
those in an older fab at Sandia. It will tie into the existing
fab that will be renovated.
The second project, a 131,000-sq.-ft. micro-lab, started in
November, with Texas-based Hensel Phelps Construction moving
earth on the $66 million project. The third building, a weapons
integration facility, is expected for bidding in July. The
162,000-sq.-ft. project is expected to cost $89 million.
The project is the largest capital program ever undertaken
at Sandia, with plans for a 2007 program completion.
>Duke City Heats Up
>A Fab Project
>Center of Culture
>A New Castle
>Lofty Ambitions
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