Friday, September 2, 2011

High Country Press article





http://www.highcountrypress.com/weekly/2011/09-01-11/appalcart-transit-center.htm
SEPTEMBER 1, 2011 ISSUE

The AppalCART Transit Center on the N.C. 105 Bypass in Boone was originally slated for completion in July 2010, but progress has been delayed. The complex is currently about 85 percent complete, according to AppalCART Transportation Director Chris Turner.

“It’s still under construction,” Turner said. “Little things are going on inside; not much is going on outside.”

On August 25, “we had a major mediation between the AppalCART project management team and McCarroll Construction team—general contractor for the job,” Turner said.

Attorney A. Holt Gwyn mediated the all-day meeting that was arranged in order to “hear the general contractor’s financial needs and to state our thoughts on the debts incurred,” Turner said.

He explained that “some of their subcontractors went out of business, so they incurred debts that were not responsibility normally of the owner.

“They were able to keep a full schedule through March and April, then things slowed down,” he said.

To get the project back in full swing, “we are going to need spending authority from the state, and they’re going to need spending authority through their bonding company,” he said.

He expects “both to come through,” but said that “it’s going to take a month or two before things are going full blast again.”

Funded by about $5.5 million through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, the energy-efficient building “will allow the fleet [of AppalCART vehicles] to operate more effectively” and will also be “a rather attractive complex,” Turner said.

The approximately 24,000-square-foot building designed by architect David Patrick Moses will consist of office space and a maintenance area. It will be LEED-certified and will feature foam insulation as well as “solar water heaters to help heat the floor of the shop,” Turner said.

The solar panels will be visible from the highway, he added.

“When we finish it, it will be a real asset to the community,” he said.

The initial pavement has been done for about two-thirds of the parking lot, and the awnings for the fleet of vehicles stand as the “largest remaining part to do,” Turner said.

“I’m hopeful we’ll be in there by Christmas,” he said, adding that it is “just a hope at this point” and could be sooner or later.

In the meantime, he said he is grateful that AppalCART has its office at 274 Winkler’s Creek Road out of which to operate.

For more information about AppalCART, click to www.appalcart.com or call 828-264-2278