By Neil Johnson njohnson@gazettextra.com June 29, 2022

 

JANESVILLE

By early August, Janesville residents could know the cost to build a proposed ice arena and civic center that’s now being called the Woodman’s Sports and Convention Center.

But between now and then, city officials and hired design consultants have to figure out how to shave off nearly 20,000 square feet—and potentially, millions of dollars—from the project plans. Doing so would bring the arena proposed at Uptown Janesville closer in line with an earlier $28 million budget for the public-private arena and conference center.

On Tuesday, the city of Janesville’s ad-hoc Woodman’s Sports and Convention Center Committee chose a tentative, 147,000-square-foot design for the center. It would combine a two-sheet ice arena and up to 50,000 square feet of flexible convention and sporting event space at 2500 N. Milton Ave., on the site of a shuttered former Sears department store.

The committee has asked the firms the city hired earlier this year, 292 Design and Zimmerman Architectural Studios, to trim as much as 18,000 square feet from a proposed arena layout that the committee said Tuesday it favors.

The move comes after the committee worked through a months-long design process.

Public Works Director Mike Payne said the suggested cuts are aimed at scaling back the arena plan that has included extra locker rooms for high school athletes and other groups using the arena alongside the major user, the Janesville Jets developmental hockey team.

“You’ll hear me say ‘right-size’ this project. I don’t know if that’s exactly the right term, but we want to get (the cost and size) more down to our original target target,” Payne said. “It’s to try and get from almost 148,000 square feet to something that’s probably more realistic based on what we think we can afford at this point.”

The city doesn’t have hard cost estimates for the project, in part because the committee had met several times but until Tuesday hadn’t settled on a design proposal.

Now, after the committee’s commitment Tuesday to a preliminary design, 292 Designs architect Tom Betti said his firm would set to work culling parts of the project to reduce its footprint. The goal is to come in close to the 130,000 square feet the city earlier calculated could cost $28 million to $30 million.

Payne and other city officials estimate that the larger, 148,000-square-foot proposal could cost upward of $41 million— twice the cost the city has said it’s willing to commit to its end of the project.

The city faces the challenge of designing a multi-use space that would satisfy the desires of three main groups:

  • The Janesville Jets Hockey club and its operators.
  • The Friends of the Indoor Sports Complex, a group that’s a booster of both the Jets and local and regional youth hockey and figure skating.
  • City tourism and hospitality groups that seek to bolster Janesville’s status as a destination for larger-scale conventions and sports tournaments.

Janesville Area Convention and Visitors Bureau Executive Director Christine Rebout was among the majority of the ad hoc committee who favored the design chosen on Tuesday. It includes a lobby that wraps around the building’s front and funnels users from the front entrances on Uptown Janesville’s west, Milton Avenue-facing side to the arena’s two ice sheets and convention spaces.

That layout would have a complicated lobby setup that committee members said would help keep crowds from getting bottlenecked at times when the center is hosting multiple sports events or conventions.

But the tentative plan, the committee members told designers, needs to be whittled down several thousand square feet—a challenge for a project with arena space that must be a specific size. For instance, designers say seating capacity would have to be spacious enough on the main ice sheet to allow for 1,400 spectators.

Betti described the work architects face now as a “squeeze” to bring the project concept more in line with the city’s original budget.

The project also would require an approximately 16,000-square-foot upper concourse for emergency use and for utilities.

The city has committed up to $2 million for design and $15 million for construction under a plan by private stakeholders who call themselves the Friends of the Indoor Sports Complex.

The friends group has committed to raise up to $9 million for the arena, although the project continues to have a budget gap that city officials say they’d hope to plug with millions in potential grant funding that the city has applied for.

On Tuesday, Payne said the city hasn’t learned from the friends group how much money it has raised for the public side of the project’s budget.

The city has been working to buy the former Sears property from Uptown Janesville’s owner, Texas private equity firm RockStep Capital for $1 after the council approved the purchase earlier this year.

The design consultants working to re-craft a scaled back version of the arena and civic center plan aim to bring back new designs to the committee on July 19.

If the committee likes the re-crafted plans, they would go to Kraus-Anderson, a third construction management firm the city has hired to do a detailed analysis of the project’s costs.

The city should have preliminary cost estimates in hand by early August, Betti said.

Before the estimates come, the city intends to host a public junket at Hedberg Public Library to get feedback from local residents July 26.


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