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pasadenaindependent.com

Thursday, March 16, 2017 - March 22, 2017

Since 1996

Your Voice, Your Community

VOLUME 21, NO. 11

Pasadena’s Historic Central Library to Undergo Restoration Construction Set to Begin in April and Conclude by June

The project will include restoration of the exterior cast stone elements, portions of the roof, and will also paint the grand windows.

- Photo by Terry Miller / Beacon Media News

BY GUS HERRERA

I

n our new digital age, where seemingly all the answers can be found as close as one’s pocket (or wherever you keep your smartphone) and libraries all across the country are facing serious existential threats, the City of Pasadena has chosen to buck the trend and invest in its Central Library. On Monday, council unanimously approved a contract to renovate the historic building. The con-

tract will be awarded to UNISPEC Construction Inc. (UNISPEC), the lowest of the three bidders that responded to the city’s request. UNISPEC, based in San Pedro, bid $172,000 to earn the project, a figure 11 percent higher than the city engineer’s estimate of $150,000 and approximately $46,000 less than the next lowest bidder. According to city staff, the discrepancy between UNISPEC’s

bid and the city’s estimate can be attributed to an underestimation of the cost of temporary scaffolding. The contractor, UNISPEC, does have a brief history with the city, having been previously contracted to perform construction of an underground electrical conduit system on Valley View Avenue – a much more substantial project which cost the city a hefty $1.195 million. Although the library

restoration will not be creating any new jobs, UNISPEC indicated that “there will be no new hires to their present workforce,” the city did indeed look out for local workers when drawing up the contract. According to staff’s report, a “local hiring provision” was included in the project specifications in order to “notify the labor unions of the goal to employ qualified Pasadena residents for 75 percent of new labor work hours on

the project … ” Council’s action approved no more than $189,200 for the project – of that total, $172,000 makes up the base contract, while the remaining $17,200 is reserved as a contingency plan to “provide for any necessary change orders,” according to city staff’s report. Pasadena’s Central Library first opened in 1927, designed in the Mediterranean-style by the firm My-

ron Hunt and H.C. Chambers, the architects also responsible for the Huntington Library and Occidental College. The building underwent expansion in the mid-1960s and throughout the 1980s, thanks to a combination of local, state, and federal money, in addition to considerable private contributions. The building, which is

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