
PUBLISHED
BY MOSHOLU
PRESERVATION
CORPORATION
| Vol.
19, No. 3 |
Feb. 9 - 22, 2006 |



Work Set to Resume on Park House at St. James
By JAMES FERGUSSON
"Contractor promises work will be complete by May 12, 2004,” says
a fading sign next to St. James Park House (officially known as the Comfort
Station and Community Meeting Center). As local residents will attest, this
promise was broken, and today the building remains fenced off, boarded up,
and in a sad state of disrepair.
According to Ashe Reardon, a parks department spokesman, a succession of
contractors has defaulted on the project since spring 2003. In all, five
companies have backed out, and this, said Reardon, explains the delay in the
park house’s renovation. “It’s been really unfortunate,” he said.
There may, however, be a flicker of light at the end of the tunnel. The
project’s bonding company, St. Paul Travelers, has hired a new general
contractor, Integrated Construction Management. “Fully-fledged construction
will start in the next few weeks, and we hope to be complete early this
summer,” said Reardon.
Work will include the replacement of windows, doors and frames; new interior
walls and finishes; and handicap accessible offices and bathrooms. Reardon
added that much of the plumbing and electrics had been completed by previous
contractors.
“We’re committed to getting this project done,” said Reardon. “It’s an old
building [the park house was built in 1936], and our goal is to bring it up
internally and make it into a useful multi-purpose space.”
In a project separate from the park house, four of the parks disintegrating
staircases have been restored using money from the filtration plant
windfall. Three are at Creston Avenue and one is at Jerome Avenue at the
north end of the park. Two others will be renovated at Morris Avenue and
work will begin this spring on the entrance by 193rd Street and Jerome.
Later in the year work will be done on the park’s lawns, benches, fences,
and perimeter wall. In total, $3.75 million is being spent.
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