Albuquerque Journal

NNSA breaks ground on new ABQ facility

Building to replace 25 aging structures across Kirtland Air Force Base

- BY JESSICA DYER

Some of the country’s most sensitive nuclear security functions are performed in outdated, rundown buildings on Kirtland Air Force Base.

It’s a problem New Mexico’s elected officials and federal government administra­tors say they are now addressing with a massive new facility.

The National Nuclear Security Administra­tion on Monday began constructi­on on a 330,000-squarefoot building in Southeast Albuquerqu­e that will eventually house about 1,200 government employees and contractor­s. That workforce is now scattered throughout 25 structures that U.S. Sen. Martin Heinrich, D-N.M., said do not reflect the advanced nature of their duties.

Heinrich and U.S. Rep. Michelle Lujan Grisham, a fellow Democrat, toured the existing facilities in

early 2016, and the experience prompted the state’s congressio­nal delegation to push for funding for a replacemen­t structure.

Heinrich recalled seeing “the most advanced nuclear workforce on the face of the planet” operating out of decrepit old barracks — a detriment for officials trying to recruit talented workers who may also have opportunit­ies at places such as Google or Facebook.

“Putting (those employees) in 60-year-old barracks with substandar­d heating and cooling doesn’t send the message that we want to bring the best and brightest here,” Heinrich said after a groundbrea­king ceremony on the lot — now just dirt and dry shrubs — where the building designed to meet LEED gold standards will rise. “This building will send that message. … We can compete with anyplace in the United States for quality of life; now we’ll have the work environmen­t to match.”

The project has secured $98 million in federal funding, and an additional $48 million is expected in the next budget cycle. It’s in the National Defense Authorizat­ion Act and supported by President Donald Trump’s budget submission, according to Lisa Gordon Hagerty, U.S. Department of Energy undersecre­tary for nuclear security and NNSA administra­tor.

That should cover the associated costs, though Gordon-Hagerty said the upper limit for the project was set at $174.7 million.

Lujan Grisham lauded Congress and the administra­tion for moving quickly — at least in federal government terms — on the project.

“I apologize for the way Congress sometimes doesn’t work,” she said. “(But) getting this kind of money in two years and having this kind of commitment is actually a pretty damn good pace.”

Constructi­on will take about 30 months, after which NNSA-affiliated engineers and other support staff can begin relocating. Kirtland’s campus will expand to include the building site after constructi­on.

Crews will eventually demolish most of the buildings the workforce currently occupies.

“Many buildings being replaced by this new facility were built before most of us were born and certainly long before the advanced technologi­es we use every day were invented. Despite these untenable conditions, our workforce has found the necessary work-arounds to get the job done,” Gordon-Hagerty said during Monday’s ceremony. “Well, no more.”

She said the new structure will allow the workforce to “collaborat­e, plan, strategize and innovate in a state-ofthe-art facility.”

The NNSA is a semiautono­mous agency within the Department of Energy that specialize­s in the “military applicatio­n of nuclear science.” It oversees operations at Sandia National Laboratori­es and Los Alamos National Laboratory.

 ?? JESSICA DYER/JOURNAL ?? U.S. Sen. Martin Heinrich, D-N.M., greets Lisa Gordon-Hagerty, head of the National Nuclear Security Administra­tion, at Monday’s groundbrea­king ceremony. At right is Rep. Michelle Lujan Grisham, D-N.M.
JESSICA DYER/JOURNAL U.S. Sen. Martin Heinrich, D-N.M., greets Lisa Gordon-Hagerty, head of the National Nuclear Security Administra­tion, at Monday’s groundbrea­king ceremony. At right is Rep. Michelle Lujan Grisham, D-N.M.
 ?? COURTESY OF NNSA ?? Officials on Monday broke ground on a 330,000-square-foot building that will house about 1,200 government employees and contractor­s.
COURTESY OF NNSA Officials on Monday broke ground on a 330,000-square-foot building that will house about 1,200 government employees and contractor­s.

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