At $191-million, the single largest highway job underway in the Los
Angeles-area today eschews white lane-markers for steel girders, and
will probably never elicit a single expletive from the traffic-bleary
masses.
Unless, that is, it’s in the spanking new employee parking
lot preceding a three-day weekend.
The biggest Caltrans construction project is not a freeway or an
overpass, but a 13-story, block-long headquarters building in downtown
Los Angeles for its own workers. When complete in January 2005, the
aluminum-encased structure, designed by noted architect Thom Mayne,
will consolidate some 1,800 local California Department of Transportation
employees under the same atrium-topped roof.
In doing so, they will be reunited from a spray of leased offices
and a pair of wobbly state buildings that some state workers have
fretted might be their disaster tomb.
Approved by the legislature in the relatively banner days of 2000,
the rising, modernistic hulk at First and Main Street will stick out
for more than its environmentally sensitive windows and child-care
center. There is scant chance it would have made it off the easel
if proposed amid the state’s current $38 billion budget hole.
It is also appearing in an era in which not a single new local freeway
is in the hopper – an era in which Caltrans own might is receding.
But public work projects often have peculiar alchemy. This 700,000-square-foot
tower owes its existence to earthquakes, union muscle, and a tincture
of politics.
WRITING ON THE WALL
For years, Caltrans engineers, planners and other administrative
staff have worked out of a boxy, World-War II-era building on Spring
Street and a 1962-circa annex directly behind it on Main Street. Freeways
were once a growth industry, and the know-how to design them required
a small battalion of people. Unlike the Spring Street office, which
is girded with reinforced concrete, the annex was designed with jacked-up
floors moored to columns – a then-revolutionary approach.
The 1994 Northridge temblor revealed the weakness in it. The older
building survived okay but the annex didn’t. It suffered cracked
walls, dislodged ceiling tiles and other damage.
A state General Services Administration report prompted by the devastating
Bay-Area quake but released after the 1994 Northridge one recommended
that both buildings be vacated. The Main Street office had floors
that could pancake, the analysis said, while the Spring Street building
rested on a foundation that flunked seismic standards.
Rejecting the idea it had to clear out the workforce, Caltrans instead
reinforced columns and did other structural shoring-up. Some employees
were incensed that officials red-tagged a state-owned parking lot
on Broadway Street yet still failed to evacuate an annex with 800
people working inside.
For them, the cavalry turned out to be the state Fire Marshall, which
concluded in a post-inspection report that the annex was over-crowed
and contained inadequate electrical and fire alarm systems – a
perilous combo in case of an emergency.
“When we stumbled across that report, we realized state
officials in Sacramento had been sitting on it,” said Arturo
Salazar, a Caltrans engineer and legislative chairman for the Professional
Engineers of California Government that represents Caltrans engineers
and related state positions. “By 1999, the employees and union
felt we were being given a snow job about the retrofit. Morale was
very low. People feared for their life.”
The union sued. Under the settlement, about 45 percent of Caltrans
District-7 staff was shuffled off to privately owned buildings on
Wilshire Boulevard, Grand Avenue, Bunker Hill and elsewhere. (The
yearly lease tab is $21 million.) The major fire-alarm systems were
fixed.
Just as important, it was decided those were Bandaid solutions. Something
permanent – and safety-hardened – was needed.
Salazar believes one of the state’s motivations for this decision
was preempting lawsuits and embarrassment. A number of Caltrans workers
had retained attorneys to represent them for health-related damages.
“They saw the writing on the wall,” he said.
A SWEET THING
Whatever the impetus, state brass found that retrofitting Caltrans’ two
existing buildings would’ve cost $200 million. A brand new office
appeared to be a better deal, even if some employees had to stay put
in the old ones until it was opened.
“We had buildings essentially worn out, but we were not worried
about them falling down on people,” said Bob Dennis, Caltrans
deputy director of administration and the man who helped orchestrate
the new headquarters. Besides economics, he said, “the new building
also made sense from an operational sense. For the first time in 20
years, we will have all the staff under the same roof. If someone
is in Norwalk, and someone is another building, it complicates things.”
Gov. Gray Davis’ regime was considerably more sympathetic about
a new Caltrans L.A.-area headquarters than his Republican predecessor.
Serendipity was on the agency’s side, too. Maria Contreras-Sweet,
the Davis-picked head of the Business, Transportation and Housing
agency that oversees Caltrans, was in one of the two structures when
the elevators failed. A handicapped woman had to be carried down the
stairs to get out during that incident. It made an impression.
“When you get a building like this approved by the legislature,
you need to have the right legislators and the right governor,” Dennis
added. “We had in our favor that that the Davis Administration
came in with a fresh perspective and Maria Sweet took on our building
as a personal issue.”
But was a fancy new place a smart real estate buy? During the same
timeframe, downtown Los Angeles was saddled with glut of vacant commercial
office space, with roughly out of every five floors empty, according
to the county’s Economic Development Corp.
Conditions have improved slightly today, though there are still 6.2-million
square feet of unused office space, including a large chunk of the
Transamerica Building that some public entities are courting. Nonetheless,
most agencies crave new, not recycled in what insiders refer to as “edifice
complex.” Two of the county’s most powerful bureaucracies,
the Metropolitan Transportation Authority and the Metropolitan Water
District, are proof of that with their signature headquarters, observers
point out.
“They say: ‘We’ll amortize the new building over
55 years. And we control our own destiny,’” explained
Carl Muhlstein, a senior director at brokerage Cushman & Wakefield. “We
are having a hard time keeping toilet paper in the elementary schools,” because
of the state’s fiscal meltdown, so outfits “better wake
up about how they spending their money.”
WHY NOW?
Project-wise, Caltrans’ glory days of road building has gone
the way of the typewriter.
The eastern extension of Foothill (210) Freeway extension is done.
Plans to widen the Ventura (101) and Long Beach (710) freeways were
dropped in the face of community opposition about the loss of homes.
And, as the Weekly has reported, officials have determined that construction
of a 4.5-mile surface extension of the 710-freeway from Alhambra to
Pasadena is virtually un-buildable because of political, legal and
community barriers. A tunnel may be the last resort.
Nip-and-tuck jobs -- carpool lanes and interchange-connectors --
are the new vogue. Altogether, the three biggest highway jobs this
year in Caltrans’ District 7 amount to a relatively skimpy $321
million.
Caltrans doesn’t fully control its purse strings anymore, either.
Legislation (SB-45) by former Sen. Quentin Kopp confers on county
transit officials the power to approve roughly three-quarters of all
freeway work. This 1997 law, which Caltrans has tried weakening in
the last few years, was needed because of resentment about the agency’s
ability to effectively guide projects through an often swamp-like
process, Kopp, now a Bay Area judge, said in an interview.
The new headquarters has its own uncertainties. Because of potential
staff cuts at Caltrans, a whole floor is expected to be vacant, and
the state will have to find a tenant, Dennis said. (Under an existing
agreement, the city of Los Angeles’ own Department of Transportation
will rent two floors in the new Caltrans office for 250-300 workers
under an existing agreement.)
It’s this tectonic shift that State Sen. Tom McClintock, D-Thousand
Oaks, believes makes Caltrans look like an empire with evaporating
colonies. He thinks the headquarters construction should be mothballed
under California’s fiscal health is restored.
“We produced a highway system that is the best in the world
with door-to-door service for every Californian,” said McClintock,
vice chairman of the Senate’s transportation committee. “That
public work mentality has turned from public service to self-aggrandizement.
That’s the tragedy. Why do you need a $191-million complex when
you can look at high-rises in downtown and see the sun on the other
side?”
SAFETY, NOT POLITICS
Caltrans’ Dennis, however, argued that the department explored
leasing or buying an existing office tower. Each had their own seismic
weaknesses or would have isolated on different floors departments
that need to work together.
Some suspect L.A. City Hall wanted the new structure to further burnish
the civic center, which has added the Disney Concert Hall and Catholic
Cathedral to a growing repertoire of public spaces. Caltrans’ project
may also drive panhandlers out while enticing other developers into
aging part of downtown.
Caltrans had planned on paying for its new headquarters in cash,
and had squirreled away the money for it. About $75 million has been
spent so far. With the state’s finances in tatters, however,
Caltrans will ship $125 million back to the state highway fund for
other projects and issue revenue bonds to bankroll the balance of
construction costs.
Salazar, the Caltrans engineer and union official, said safety, not
politics, should count the most. The existing Caltrans offices, which
he and others say is the most productive of any statewide, pump black
particles out of the air conditioners and have posted signs warning
of lead inside.
“It’s a tribute to the people who work here” for
not boycotting the conditions, he said. “We could have held
back. We took pride in our work.”
The state engineers union, which is still livid about an approved
ballot measure allowing the state to contract out for technical services
on transit projects, was a major fundraiser to Davis. In the last
three years, records show, it gave $267,000.
The department’s new headquarters will not house the traffic-monitoring
and emergency-dispatch operations overseeing Southern California’s
freeway grid. It is not seismically resilient enough to keep the system
intact in case of a ferocious quake or other disaster. A new center
to perform that task is under construction in Eagle Rock. The cost:
$45 million.
copyright Pasadena Weekly
A nearly identical version of this story appeared in the Pasadena
Weekly
TRANSIT COMMISSION AUDITORS CAST
EAGLE EYE ON TUTOR’S
COSTS, Los Angeles Business Journal
http://chipjacobs.com/a_transit.html
Transit commission Auditors Cast Eagle Eye on Tutor’s
Costs, published in Los Angeles
Business Journal. Los Angeles County Transportation
Commission auditors are questioning tens of thousands
of dollars in overhead expenses that powerhouse Metro Rail
contractor Tutor-Saliba Corp. submitted
two years ago, according to a preliminary audit obtained by the
Business Journal.
September 28, 1992
METRO RAIL COST-OVERRUN TAB ADDS TO CITY HALL FISCAL WOES, Los Angeles
Business Journal
http://chipjacobs.com/a_metrorail.htm
Metro Rail Cost-Overrun Tab adds to the City Hall Fiscal
Woes, published in Los Angeles
Business Journal. The City of Los Angeles is
on the hook to pay $100 million in Metro Rail Red Line
construction overruns under a little-known cost-sharing
deal with the Los Angeles County Transportation Commission.
March 16, 1992