UTAH STATE EDITION
A Supplement to:
March 20 2016 Vol. I • No. 3
“The Nation’s Best Read Construction Newspaper… Founded in 1957.” Your Utah Connection – Dennis Hogeboom – 1-877-7CEGLTD – dennishogeboom@cegltd.com
Freeport West Builds ARA Development in West Valley City Big-D Construction photo
Construction is proceeding rapidly as Freeport West Industrial Properties continues to develop 130 acres of land in West Valley City, Utah, just outside Salt Lake City.
By Irwin Rapoport CEG CORRESPONDENT
Construction is proceeding rapidly as Freeport West Industrial Properties continues to develop 130 acres of land in West Valley City, Utah, just outside Salt Lake City. “With this new industrial campus enterprise, we are adding capacity for new large-scale storage, warehousing, distribution, office and showroom space within the Wasatch Front, where it has been tapped out,” said Bradley J.
Ross, Freeport West executive managing director. “The origin of the name ARA means ‘brings rain.’ It describes the remarkable opportunity the property affords for attracting the world’s largest manufacturers and distributors to our state and creating thousands of new jobs locally. There is a need for large-scale buildings to compete with California and other neighboring states.” He added that the need for largescale industrial storage facilities will attract businesses from across the country to service a growing con-
sumer market in the western states. When fully developed in 2019 — based on current economic forecasts, the ARA is expected to create 3,000 jobs and be home to five structures. Approximately one mi. of roads will service the businesses. The ground breaking for the project took place on May 29, 2014. The company, founded in 1963, is one of the state’s largest developers and owner of commercial properties. Freeport West also has properties in California, Arizona, and Nevada. ARA is well located
in terms of existing roads and is just west of Rocky Mountain Raceway. The project will consist of ARAA, B, C, D and E, all to be built to schedule. They are all single-story buildings. A paved ground-level parking lot will be built to accommodate roughly 3,000 cars and truck trailers. The whole development was designed by Hilton Williams Architects. The buildings are being placed on a relatively flat field that has no drainage issues. There are no existing utilities on the land, which
gives construction crews a relatively free hand to operate. As the buildings go up, utilities will be extended onto the property. ARA’s initial structure — ARAB, located at 6755 West and the 2100 South Frontage Road in West Valley, was completed in September 2015, and opened for business in the same month. The 500,000 sq.-ft. (46,452 sq m) distribution center took nine months to build and is currently available for lease. Big-D Construction was the contractor for this project. see ARA page 8
Plan Could Divert Funds to Help Lake Powell Pipeline SALT LAKE CITY (AP) A proposal in the Utah Legislature would greenlight the transfer of nearly $500 million from transportation projects to water projects in a move that could funnel money to the proposed Lake Powell pipeline. The Utah Senate approved the measure on a 19-10 vote, advancing it to the House, The Salt Lake Tribune reported.
The bill’s sponsor, Republican Sen. Stuart Adams of Layton, said ensuring the state’s water supply should take precedence over funding things like highway projects. “I don’t like being stuck on I-15. I don’t think anybody likes that. But running out of water is, I think, significantly more impactful than being stuck on a freeway,” Adams said, according to The Spectrum newspa-
per in St. George. Adams said the measure would help fund future water projects to help with the state’s growing population. That could include two major pipeline projects that conservation groups and others have said may be unnecessary. One pipeline project would pull water from Bear River in northern Utah. The
other, the billion-dollar Lake Powell pipeline, would pull water from the Colorado River to growing southwestern Utah counties. The Utah Department of Transportation estimates that Adam’s funding bill would divert nearly half a billion dollars from its road projects over an 11-year period. see PIPELINE page 9