Work on the long-delayed project to overhaul the Cumberland Avenue
Strip near the University of Tennessee is expected to finally start in
early June now that the city has a contractor that it can afford to pay.
After
failing to find a developer during the previous two bidding attempts,
Knoxville officials on Tuesday received proposals from two construction
teams just minutes before the 11 a.m. deadline.
The city now plans to move ahead with the company that came in at the lowest cost.
"First
and foremost we are very excited to see this project come forward. It
has been a long time coming," said Anne Wallace, a project manager in
the city's Office of Redevelopment. "Merchants and folks who own
business in the area have literally been envisioning changes to
Cumberland for more than thirty years."
As it stands, Southern
Constructors is the "apparent" winner, city officials said, submitting a
proposed bid of roughly $16.87 million – about $400,000 lower than the
proposal made by Blaylock & Sons.
The city's engineering
department will still have to review the documents to ensure that
everything is in order. Officials will then iron out a contract, which
they expect to bring before the City County and the Tennessee Department
of Transportation by the end of the month for approval.
If
everything works out, construction crews should be turning dirt on the
project's first phase by early June and wrapping it up by the end of the
year.
The second and final phase will start soon after should finish up by August 2017.
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