{"id":79646,"date":"2021-12-19T22:30:00","date_gmt":"2021-12-20T07:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/city-narrows-field-in-search-for-new-city-hall-site\/"},"modified":"2021-12-19T22:30:00","modified_gmt":"2021-12-20T07:30:00","slug":"city-narrows-field-in-search-for-new-city-hall-site","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/city-narrows-field-in-search-for-new-city-hall-site\/","title":{"rendered":"City narrows field in search for new City Hall site"},"content":{"rendered":"
If everything goes according to plan, voters in the City and Borough of Juneau may be casting ballots to decide where the city does business in the future during the 2022 municipal election.<\/p>\n
In a survey earlier this year, Juneau residents expressed strong interest in building a new City <\/a>Hall<\/a>. Now, city officials are considering where to build the structure by refining the list of possible sites from a long list of possible locations that spanned from downtown to the Mendenhall Valley.<\/p>\n At Monday’s Public Works and Facilities Committee meeting, committee members gave Katie Koester, director of the CBJ Engineering and Public Works Department, the green light to take a closer look at four potential sites, which city staff members had selected using criteria to establish site suitability.<\/p>\n The four options moving forward for additional consideration include renovating current city hall facilities, redeveloping the vacant Walmart building, adding a new building atop the downtown transportation center or constructing a new building on the city-owned public safety lot at 450 Whittier St.<\/p>\n Koester explained that each site has a list of pros and cons that warrant further study.<\/p>\n She said that renovating the current city hall building is the least expensive option in the short-term with a price tag of $11.2 million. However, even with renovations, the usable life of the building is likely 25 additional years.<\/p>\n “That’s a lot to sink into a 70-year old facility,” she told committee members, adding the city would still face space constraints.<\/p>\n