Blogs & News Articles

Work to Begin Soon on Congress Street

By Pauline Masson, Pacific Editor | Posted: Thursday, February 26, 2015, 5:30 pm
Work will begin next month to rebuild a 12¬block stretch of Highway N (Congress Street) as part of a three¬phase project to improve the street from Fourth Street to the city limits. The $942,027 project, stretching from Fourth Street to Hawthorne Subdivision, will take six months to complete. N.B. West, St. Louis is the contractor.

Cochran Engineering designed the project. East¬West Gateway Council of Governments (EWGW) approved the federal funds in the February 2013 funding round. Improvements will include asphalt road resurfacing, concrete sidewalks, concrete curb, new concrete approaches to residences, pavement striping and traffic control. Some lane closures will be allowed for portions of the work, however, the contractor will be required to maintain two¬lane, two¬way traffic and provide portable traffic signals to control traffic flow. The city engineer will receive paving schedule plans and approve the work prior to commencement and will be notified ahead of time when the single lane traffic plan goes into effect.

Although this is the second Highway N improvement project, the work is designated Phase Three. “The Highway N phases were conceptualized in numeric order,” said Dan Rahn, city engineer. “However, due to the availability of funding and shifting schedules, they are being constructed out of order.” Phase 1, which included new sidewalks, curbs, and storm sewer improvements from Hawthorne Subdivision to Indian Hills Subdivision, was conceptualized first and completed in late 2012. Phase 2 was to continue sidewalks and improvements from Riverbend School (Indian Trail) out to the city limits (Myers Farm Lane).

This phase, which would extend the improvements as far as they could go inside the city limits, originally was to be designed and constructed without federal funds and be paid for solely by the city. After the Congress Street phase was applied for, the sidewalk extension project was deemed too expensive to be funded solely by the city and was abandoned for a later date. Officials should know by April of this year if the funding will be granted.

In February 2014 the city applied for funds for a fourth phase, which would have included the Riverbend School to Myers Farm Lane sidewalks along with an asphalt overlay for the remaining unimproved portion of Highway N, which would have cost over $1 million. When EWGW denied that grant and advised the city that due to diminishing federal funds that projects over $300,000 to $400,000 would not be approved, the city went back to the Phase 2 sidewalk project. The city has since applied for federal funds for the sidewalk project or Phase Two, which will hopefully be funded in the FY 2016¬19 round of grants.

“The good news is that all of these roads continue to be eligible for federal funding,” Rahn said. “But due to the decrease in funding, we will have to take smaller bites as we progress with road improvements. “All in all I think the city has done a great job of utilizing federal funds for the last several years,” he said. “Consider this, since 2011, we have secured federal funding for $9.6 million worth of improvements at a total cost to the city of $2.1 million, including the three projects that are awaiting construction. That’s a cost of 22 cents on the dollar and a total of about $526,000 per fiscal year (2011¬15).”

Board OKs Services Pact on Energy Loan

By Keith E. Domke St. Clair Missourian Editor | Posted: Saturday, February 28, 2015, 10:00 am

St. Clair’s aldermen approved a professional services contract last week between the city and Cochran Engineering regarding energy loan improvements at three locations. The board unanimously approved the ordinance centering on the agreement with Cochran Engineering for $24,350. “This was part of the energy loan discussions we’ve had,” Assistant City Administrator Travis Dierker told the aldermen.

The amount of the contract came in under the budgeted amount of $28,000, Dierker said. Under terms of the deal, Cochran will provide mechanical, electrical and plumbing design services for heating, air conditioning and lighting upgrades at city hall and improved lighting at the senior center and wastewater treatment plant. Last month, the city found out it had been approved for an energy loan through the Missouri Department of Economic Development to make the improvements.

The loan totals $259,180. A resolution passed by the board last month authorized the city’s participation in the energy loan program. Payments will be made through the energy savings the city will receive through the upgrades. The energy loan program is separate from the solar project the city is working on through SunVest Solar. According to information presented, capital expenditures on top of the loan are $122,166.29, according to Cochran documentation. Estimates were that through the loan and energy program, the city will be getting the upgrades for about 20 cents on the dollar.

Progressive Grocer 2014 Best New Store Design Award

Cochran wins Progressive Grocer Magazine 2014 Best Store Design under 50,000 square feet – 

Fricks-32 awebsite

Progressive Grocer Presents 2014 Store Design Contest Winners (see below link to article) –

Supermarket industry trade publication salutes 14 innovative design concepts

From Washington, D.C., to St. George, Utah, 14 exceptional food stores that have cut their ceremonial ribbons during the past year have been chosen as the winners of Progressive Grocer’s fifth annual Store Design Contest.

Pouring through an impressive array of entries to arrive at a show-stopping collection of extraordinary supermarket design concepts, PG chose its Store Design Contest winners from five budget categories – two for new ground-up construction, and three for remodeling projects ranging from subtle to substantial – providing store design teams an opportunity to be honored for outstanding achievements in innovation, functionality, ingenuity, inventiveness and overall supervision.

“With enhanced in-store experiences and accelerated customer conveniences underlining the short list of must-have attributes of this year’s award-winning concept designs, our inspiring slate of 2014 Store Design winners – eight of which are new construction and the remainder consisting of major remodels – are most definitely heeding the call and moving the differentiation needle forward in directions never before seen in previous years’ showdowns,” noted Meg Major, PG’s chief content editor.

“Fitting with PG’s signature Store of the Month series, we take great pleasure in showcasing the most innovative store design concepts from around the country that collectively enhance the industry’s image and improve the shopper experience,” added Major. “At the same time, we’re also pleased to have a chance to spotlight the industry’s talented design teams, whose savvy, skills and keen eyes for detail produce measurable improvements with traffic flow, higher store sales, and more loyal, satisfied grocery shoppers.”

The complete list of PG’s 2014 Store Design Contest winners, all of which can be found in the publication’s August print and digital issues

Please follow the below link to view the award –

https://stagnitodigitalmedia.com/pg/Digital_Editions/Progressive_Grocer_August_2014_output/web/flipviewerxpress.html