Bryan School Board Advances Building Projects

The Bryan school board continues to move ahead with projects, some approved by voters and others funded by oil and gas revenue.

The board voted Monday night to split architectural duties in its $132 million dollar bond issue between at least two firms.

The board approved entering negotiations with an international company with a Houston office, Stantec, to design expansions at Rudder, Davila, Ross, Henderson, Crockett, and Jones.

Another national firm with a Houston office, PBK, which developed the bond package, has the new Stephen F. Austin, converting the present SFA into administrative offices, renovating the civic auditorium, and turning Milam into the new home of the Mary Catherine Harris alternative high school.

The board unanimously approved the administration’s recommendation on the composition and responsibilities of a ten member committee that will recommend who will be the Construction Manager at Risk. The CMAR will be in charge of overseeing the construction of the new SFA, conversion of the present SFA, and updating the civic auditorium. The combined cost is $47 million. The committee is composed of board member Tommy Bosquez, the superintendent, the SFA principal, the executive director of technology services, the fine arts director, the benefits and risk manager, the director of maintenance and operations, the executive director of human resources and support services, the district’s construction manager, and the architect.

Click below for comments from Chief Financial Officer Amy Drozd, visiting with WTAW’s Bill Oliver, about using two architects and the CMAR selection process.

 

The board also spent another $1.4 million dollars the district is projecting to collect in oil and gas revenue on replacing air conditioning at two campuses. PBK was awarded the design contract involving the gym and cafeteria at Bryan Collegiate and a portion of the Bryan High campus.

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