| Owner of the Year: City of Phoenix Builds the Future By Scott Blair
Southwest Contractor is pleased to name City of Phoenix
as the "2006 Owner of the Year", and recognizes
the City's quality of work, the quantity of large-scale construction
projects and the relationships it forms with contractors and
designers.
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Southwest Contractor magazine has named the City of
Phoenix as the fourth annual Owner of the Year. Based both
on the quantity of large-scale capital improvement projects
the city is planning or currently building, the award is also
given based upon the quality of work and the relationships
that the city builds with contractors and design firms.
"As an owner, the City of Phoenix is fair and honorable
- a joy to do business with," said Mike Gausden, executive
vice president and western division manager of Hunt Construction
Group, Inc. "They go through a selection process that
gives everyone a fair chance, while clearly communicating
what they want and what your deliverables are going to be."
To prioritize what projects go out to bid, the city goes through
several planning processes that culminate in the formulation
of a Capital Improvement Program (CIP).
The CIP is prepared each year as a multi-year plan for capital
expenditures needed to replace, expand and improve the public
infrastructure.
For the year 2005, the CIP is budgeted for $2.3 billion. Through
2010, the city plans on spending almost $5.4 billion on water,
aviation, downtown redevelopment and infrastructure projects.
"As a growing city, our focus on the five year plan is
to continue to expand services out to the city fringes where
the construction and the growth is, while also focusing on
expanding and improving services to all residents of Phoenix,"
said Wylie Bearup, city engineer and director of the engineering
and architectural services department.
This includes the downtown development plan. "We will
complete our $600 million expansion and renovation of the
Phoenix Convention Center and finish the $250 million downtown
hotel. All of these are major downtown projects that are going
to occur during the current five-year CIP."
"Phoenix is pushing forward with projects that will revitalize
our downtown, like the expanded Civic Plaza, the new downtown
hotel, light rail and the Arizona State University downtown
campus," said Vice Mayor Michael Johnson, Phoenix Councilman
for the city's District 8. "Making the process smooth
for the businesses doing this work makes good sense for all.
We appreciate the hard work so many groups and businesses
are doing to make downtown Phoenix an even better place to
live and work." Johnson also represents much of downtown
and south Phoenix and is the Chairman of the council's "Downtown,
Economy and International" subcommittee.
Over the past five years the city has transitioned away from
the traditional design/bid/build project delivery method.
"All of the city's major building projects are built
using either CM at risk or design-build," Bearup said.
"The only projects in the city that are still done using
low bid process are the streets and some water line projects
that still make sense since they can be designed very thoroughly
and you don't have the integration of multiple trades like
you do in vertical building projects."
The benefits of this shift were felt almost immediately. "We
get the value of the contractor's participation throughout
the design phase so that we get projects that meet our needs
better." Bearup said. "We have a better relationship,
and have reduced the litigation significantly from the old
design/bid/build days. In fact, there used to be an expression:
design/bid/build/litigate on our low-bid projects, for a number
of reasons and not to fault anyone. But it was just an adversorial
relationship by the way the contracts were managed. We've
gotten away from that completely."
The city has only had one case of litigation within the $2.8
billion body of work performed using alternative delivery
project so far, Bearup explained. "That is incredible.
In contrast, the last four design/bid/build projects the city
had have all gone to litigation. That was part of the reason
we moved almost wholesale to alternative delivery methods
in our vertical building projects," Bearup added.
Contractors have responded favorably to this change. "When
Phoenix says they want to be your partner in a project, they
mean it," said Ralph Ketchum, southwest regional manager
for Austin Commercial, a general contractor on the $175 Sky
Harbor Consolidated Rental Car Facility. "Teamwork and
mutual respect are paramount to their work ethic."
All Sky Harbor, Goodyear and Deer Valley airport construction
goes through the city's aviation department, with funding
coming from operating revenue, federal and capital grant programs
and various other sources.
"We try to bid out projects in design and construction
packages because this provides multiple opportunities for
firms to get contracts at the airport," said David Hensley,
deputy aviation director for design and construction services.
"We are very cognizant of that responsibility of trying
to spread the work around. We are also embracing the qualification
selection basis for contractors so they can be true members
of the design and construction team. This is the same way
we select the design professionals, so we feel we get a truly
energized development team when decisions are made by qualifications
rather than lowest price."
Contractors are currently working on the final phases of the
Sky Harbor Terminal 4 Retail Improvements, a $45 million project
designed to bring more retail options to meet customer needs,
such as a bookstore and drugstore.
"Another project is the Inline Explosive Detection System,
for baggage," Hensley said.
"Instead of the large lobby x-rays where people put their
bags now, we are building a new area for them. After a passenger's
bags are checked, they are conveyed to the EDS location, making
the system seamless for our customers." Most of the funding
for this project is coming from the federal government.
Looming in the airport's future is a major redevelopment of
the west terminal, Terminal 2. "This is a very exciting
development project with a lot of opportunities for the construction
community," Hensley said. "It will be a 33-gate
terminal which will also require a new west runway entry,
roadway development, new aprons and cross-taxiways."
The Environmental Impact Statement is currently being finalized,
and a decision on the timeline on construction should be made
by second quarter of this year, according to Hensley.
The Water Services Department will also be keeping engineers
and contractors busy in the coming months.
"Though we are considered a young city, we are now transitioning
in terms of the age of our infrastructure, which is approaching
40-years old, to a point where we need to be making more of
an investment in its rehabilitation," said Carlos Padilla,
assistant director of the department. He added that there
are various impending federal and state water quality regulations.
"These require that we improve our processes and do various
things to remain in regulatory compliance," Padilla said.
The department is currently overseeing the $117 million Lake
Pleasant Wastewater Treatment Plant, which is planned for
completion in early 2007.
"We are also converting some of our treatment facilities
to granulized activated carbon, which is a pretty costly proposition
due to all the other improvements that have to be made at
the same time," Padilla said.
The city is also working on capacity improvements and rehabilitation
to its aging sewer systems.
"We feel we have a great relationship with our contractors
and engineers," Padilla said. "We work very much
in partnership with them, and most of our projects have partnering-type
arrangements." The department utilizes just about every
type of project delivery, even adding job order contracting
and design-build-operate to the mix, as with the Lake Pleasant
plant.
An important facet of the city's 'spread the work' philosophy
has been the disparity program for women-and minority-owned
businesses, small business enterprises and disadvantaged businesses.
"We are committed to continuing to have high goals for
those kinds of programs within the city projects," Bearup
said.
Through these programs, small or minority-owned contractors
can gain experience and help propel their businesses forward.
"We were involved in the rental car facility and teamed
with a larger electrical contractor, who acted as our mentor,"
said Dan Puente, president of D.P. Electric, Inc., a Phoenix-based,
minority-owned electrical contractor. "Without programs
like that we wouldn't have the opportunity to be exposed to
that size of a project. It has allowed us to work at another
level, with the "big" boys, if you will. We are
extremely grateful for the opportunities the city provides."
The city also benefits greatly from these programs. "By
spreading the work around we create a healthy, competitive
environment which in turn produces quality performance and
competitive pricing from our construction partners,"
Bearup said.
The future for the City of Phoenix holds many opportunities
for the construction community. In the coming five-year plan,
the downtown core is set to explode with activity-the convention
center, light rail, a large hotel project and an urban Arizona
State University campus being just a few of the large-scale
projects.
Yet there are many challenges to overcome. "The continued
escalation of materials pricing and the shortage of qualified
craftspeople in this market are challenges for all of these
major projects that we have planned," Bearup said. "We
used to see five or six bids for every trade, but now we're
seeing only two or three and I see that getting tighter as
we get more and more work underway."
Overview of Selected City of Phoenix Construction Projects>>
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