677
Senior MemberSenior Member
677

PostDec 05, 2022#301

To be fair, they still have to analyze the data. Yeah, some preliminary thoughts or findings would be nice, but it could be a bit too early to share.

"Now that all the field observations in the park are complete, she's spending the next few months helping to analyze the data and create reports that will include evidence-based recommendations to approve access to the park in both the greater bi-state area and in the city ZIP codes near the park."

"After analysis a final report will be issued to the funder, Forest Park Forever, a non-profit that supports the park, and to the City of St. Louis."

226
Junior MemberJunior Member
226

PostJan 14, 2023#302

There is construction on west pine within the park, looks like they are either replacing the curbing, widening, or adding a bike lane.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

13K
Life MemberLife Member
13K

PostApr 01, 2023#303

$600k building permit issued for replacing four tennis courts.

PostMay 13, 2023#304

$7.3M building permit application submitted for Jefferson Lake

PostMay 13, 2023#305

$1.3M building permit application submitted for Grand Lake

PostMay 13, 2023#306

$487k building permit application submitted for Bowl Lake Pavilion

sc4mayor
sc4mayor

PostJun 27, 2023#307

Forest Park water projects, Citygarden expansion advance
https://www.bizjournals.com/stlouis/new ... vance.html

405
Full MemberFull Member
405

PostJun 27, 2023#308

^ Great news.  I don't think I remember hearing anything about the Citygarden expansion.

340
Full MemberFull Member
340

PostAug 12, 2023#309

https://www.ksdk.com/article/news/local ... 181f34be1d

The Muny is constructing a backstage pagoda to store scenery.

Sent from my LM-V600 using Tapatalk


13K
Life MemberLife Member
13K

PostAug 12, 2023#310

$1M building permit application submitted for basketball courts
Forest Park Basketball Courts Rendering Looking South.jpg (186.4KiB)

788
Super MemberSuper Member
788

PostAug 14, 2023#311

1M?!  

9,539
Life MemberLife Member
9,539

PostAug 14, 2023#312

^ concrete and labor arent cheap

337
Full MemberFull Member
337

PostAug 14, 2023#313

dbInSouthCity wrote:^ concrete and labor arent cheap
Exactly. For reference 4” of concrete at 500 sqft is roughly $6500. That would be considered cheap basic concrete. This, I imagine, will be thicker and higher grade with color therefore pushing the dollar amount up quickly.

788
Super MemberSuper Member
788

PostAug 14, 2023#314

Lol. Concrete is still very cheap and the labor here is as simple as it gets. I hope they bid these things out to small businesses as well. 

9,539
Life MemberLife Member
9,539

PostAug 14, 2023#315

there is about 17,000-20,000 sq feet of concrete there and that's about $250,000 alone 

6,660
AdministratorAdministrator
6,660

PostAug 14, 2023#316

Not to mention proper grading and any soils corrections, subgrade preparation and compaction, rebar or post tensioning cable depending on the design, high quality finishing, painting, pavilion, benches and other site furnishings, water service for the drinking fountains, landscaping, and more. Once you add up materials, equipment, labor, direct and indirect overhead, and contractor and subcontractor profit, you can hit $1 million pretty quickly.

788
Super MemberSuper Member
788

PostAug 14, 2023#317

dbInSouthCity wrote:
Aug 14, 2023
there is about 17,000-20,000 sq feet of concrete there and that's about $250,000 alone 
Whats your math here? 

I don't really care if they spend 100M on it unless this is public money that is spent but it's a crazy amount for what it is. 

Also if like I said they bid these things out to small businesses as well and this is the price they come up with then that's fine but I have a hunch they have a "preferred" GC. 

sc4mayor
sc4mayor

PostAug 14, 2023#318

^ A smaller company isn’t going to have the buying power to purchase materials at a cheaper cost than the big guys.

MattnSTL seemed to give a pretty good run down on some of the things driving costs here:
Not to mention proper grading and any soils corrections, subgrade preparation and compaction, rebar or post tensioning cable depending on the design, high quality finishing, painting, pavilion, benches and other site furnishings, water service for the drinking fountains, landscaping, and more. Once you add up materials, equipment, labor, direct and indirect overhead, and contractor and subcontractor profit, you can hit $1 million pretty quickly.

1,218
Expert MemberExpert Member
1,218

PostAug 15, 2023#319

I'm really pleased with the location selected. It will add vibrancy, to the handball and racquetball area. I also like the mix of half and full court options. This is fantastic.

547
Senior MemberSenior Member
547

PostAug 15, 2023#320

flipz wrote:
Aug 14, 2023
dbInSouthCity wrote:
Aug 14, 2023
there is about 17,000-20,000 sq feet of concrete there and that's about $250,000 alone 
Whats your math here? 

I don't really care if they spend 100M on it unless this is public money that is spent but it's a crazy amount for what it is. 

Also if like I said they bid these things out to small businesses as well and this is the price they come up with then that's fine but I have a hunch they have a "preferred" GC. 
Exactly.  The City (not sure if this is technically a city funded project) has literally one preferred cement contractor.  17k-20k of concrete is a medium size job at best.  Current market rate for broom finished flat work is $8-$10 ft.  $13 per foot is expensive.  

1,607
Totally AddictedTotally Addicted
1,607

PostAug 16, 2023#321

Thought this was going through Forest Park Forever.

I think $8-10/sqft was typical pre-pamdemic.  I know for our smaller projects we were pushing $18-20 across all bids and large commercial is closer to $15 these days so don't think that number is off base. 

788
Super MemberSuper Member
788

PostAug 16, 2023#322

ok at $15 that is 300k( at 20k sq ft). So 700k on the 4 post structure and maybe a dozen lights? I know this is small money compared to what they spend but because it is not a large project it allows us to see how wasteful and/or corrupt they are. 

547
Senior MemberSenior Member
547

PostAug 16, 2023#323

TheWayoftheArch_V2.0 wrote:
Aug 16, 2023
Thought this was going through Forest Park Forever.

I think $8-10/sqft was typical pre-pamdemic.  I know for our smaller projects we were pushing $18-20 across all bids and large commercial is closer to $15 these days so don't think that number is off base. 
Let me know if you need a good referral.  We are still paying $8-$10 per ft.  

1,093
Expert MemberExpert Member
1,093

PostAug 16, 2023#324

It's interesting to learn how many members of this forum purchase concrete as part of their jobs. 

1,642
Totally AddictedTotally Addicted
1,642

PostAug 16, 2023#325

The nearest school to me has a backboard but no rim and hasn't for years. I entertained the thought of adding a rim and net myself but ultimately decided I should stay out of it.

Read more posts (128 remaining)