Local Govt | National News Video | Parliament Headlines | Politics Headlines | More Categories

 


Indoor sports centre: cheaper contract signed

NEWS RELEASE
23 November 2009

Indoor sports centre: cheaper contract signed

Construction of Wellington’s Indoor Community Sport Centre (ICSC) is set to start early next month – with more than $4 million cut from the building budget.

Wellington City Council has awarded the main contract to build the centre to Mainzeal Property and Construction Ltd.

Mayor Kerry Prendergast is expected to turn the first sod at the ICSC site on Cobham Drive on Monday 7 December.

Mayor Prendergast says she is very happy to report that the Council has made significant savings on the contract. In the report by Sir John Anderson, commissioned earlier this year, consultants Mallard Cooke estimated that building costs on the Cobham Drive site would be $40.45 million. However the Mainzeal tender is for $36.24 million - a saving of $4.21 million.

This saving can be attributed to a major value-engineering initiative by the Council's Project Management Office staff in the past few months and a more competitive construction market due to current market conditions.

“I’d like to thank the PMO staff and Mainzeal for going the extra mile to keep costs on this project down as far as realistically possible.”

Value-engineering is used by project managers to review initial designs, materials and proposed construction methods to make further budget savings. This initiative and the Mainzeal contract are helping to keep the overall ICSC budget to $46 million.

The overall $46 million cost includes construction, architectural design, project management, landscaping and traffic improvements.

“It is fantastic that we will soon finally be able to see this much-needed centre taking shape,” Mayor Prendergast said.

“Wellington has been waiting for this for a long time. The ICSC, with its 12 courts, will be a huge boost for community sport, a superb facility for the whole city and is something all Wellingtonians can be proud of.”

Construction is expected to take around 18 months to complete.

Three further courts could be added to the ICSC in future if necessary. It has had the overwhelming backing of Wellington’s sports bodies throughout the planning process.

Geoff Henry, of Athletics Wellington, said: “The sports codes have been crying out for something like this for over 10 years. The large indoor space will provide a focal point for the community and a valuable asset, not just for indoor sports but also for schools’ physical education and the health and recreation of the wider community. The sooner it is built the better.”

The Council approved construction of the ICSC at Cobham Park in June 2007 after seven years of investigation and planning. Resource consent was granted in January – with conditions amended by the Environment Court in June – and building consent followed in August.

Two independent reviews, including Sir John Anderson’s, overwhelmingly backed the Cobham Park site.

ENDS

 
 
Parliament Headlines | Politics Headlines | Regional Headlines

 

Questions of the Day:

Privacy Breach: ACC Reports Sent To Wrong Addresses

The report has two parts, a cover sheet and an attachment with further data included. That further data includes the name of the individuals, the type of injury they sustained and the cost to date. More>>

Education: Will Govt Introduce National Standards Training Standards?

The education sector union NZEI Te Riu Roa is questioning how the Education Minister can expect professional trainers to successfully train schools to implement National Standards when the Standards are completely untried and untested. More>>

ALSO:

Sport & Local Politics: Wellington MP Blue Over Possible Loss Of Sevens

Labour’s Wellington Central MP Grant Robertson is asking sevens fans to sign his on-line petition to ensure the IRB’s New Zealand leg remains at its natural home, in the capital. More>>

ALSO:

Gordon Campbell: Free Trade With US More Monty Python Than Holy Grail

Perhaps we can all quietly sign a pact to forego comparing a free trade deal with the US to the quest for the Holy Grail. This ‘free trade as Holy Grail’ notion is a cliché that will not die, because the media loves it so much. More>>

Institutions: High School MPs To Upgrade Behaviour From Kindergarten Level

This is an opportunity for young people to be heard in the very chamber where this country’s politicians regularly debate legislation and the issues of the day. More>>

Smellie Sniffs The Breeze: Foreshore, Seabed, Agh!

Early reports from today’s hui of Maori and national leaders at Waitangi suggest a typically turbulent exchange, piqued this year by signs of how the John Key-led National-Maori Party government continues to change the way politics could be played in New Zealand. More >>

ALSO:

Ironies: ACT Calls For Harsher Penalties For Possessing Ten Thousand Spoons

ACT New Zealand Law & Order Spokesman David Garrett today welcomed High Court Judge Justice Asher’s call for the Government to review laws on knife possession, and agreed that offenders should face tougher penalties. More>>

ALSO:

Peace, Love: International Position For MP

Manukau East MP Ross Robertson has been appointed as Deputy Convenor of the Peace and Democracy Programme in addition to his role as a member of the Executive Board of Parliamentarians for Global Action (PGA). More>>

LATEST HEADLINES

More RSS  RSS

Gordon Campbell: Putting The SAS Back Into Afghanistan

Who has stolen John Key’s brain? The Prime Minister who only a couple of months ago was demanding to see a viable exit strategy before he would put New Zealand combat troops back into Afghanistan, has been replaced by a John Key impersonator for whom the vaguest of goals – combatting global terrorism – now seems like a darn good reason for doing so. More >>

MOST READ HEADLINES

More RSS  RSS
 
 
 
powered by newsagent
NZ independent news