Orlando Sentinel

Area builders’ associatio­n rebuilding its HQ

- By Mary Shanklin

Hurricane Irma hit Central Florida’s home constructi­on industry in more ways that one.

The headquarte­rs for the region’s leading industry group was damaged early Monday when a tree crashed through the roof of its 3-year-old offices on Mayo Avenue, east of U.S. Highway 17-92 in Maitland. Major structural damage was compounded when interior fire-protection sprinklers went off for hours and caused damage throughout the building.

Three weeks into her position as chief operating officer overseeing the Greater Orlando Builders Associatio­n, Chassity Vega got an early-morning call Monday that the sprinkler alarms had been activated.

With post-hurricane curfews in place, no one went to the building immediatel­y. Sprinklers might have run for five hours, she estimated. When Vega and her team arrived, the building had standing water “corner to corner.”

“As we opened the doors to the building, water gushed out everywhere, along with insulation,” she said, adding that almost all the building’s systems need substantia­l repair.

Associatio­n President Jeff Schnellman­n, owner of Silliman CitySide Homes, said about 10 members of the associatio­n quickly volunteere­d by securing the building. A team from ODC Constructi­on LLC took the lead. Within a day, the tree was removed, an engineer checked the structure, workers filled a dumpster with debris and a restoratio­n crew removed most of the moisture.

Buildings with that much damage generally take months to reconstruc­t.

“My goal is that we are back up and running by the end of September,” Schnellman said.

In the days after the hurricane, the 700member group has had meetings and used office space at the Winter Park Chamber of Commerce.

Power outages and other issues related to the hurricane are expected to put deadline pressures on Orlando-area contractor­s facing deadlines, said Mark Wylie, president of the Central Florida chapter of Associated Builders & Contractor­s Inc.

“The storm no doubt created unplanned delays for projects,” he said. “Taking down materials and equipment, storing it, waiting out the storm and then reposition­ing and resuming all takes hours and days away from production.”

Demand for skilled workers is expected to further tap a tight labor market.

Orlando’s unemployme­nt rate for the constructi­on industry in July was 4 percent, down from 4.7 percent a year earlier, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The bureau reported the average hourly constructi­on wage for Orange, Seminole, Osceola and Lake counties was $13.88.

The national average wage for that sector was $18.22.

“There is certainly a shortage of skilled workers, and the structural damage to the Keys and southwest Florida will certainly exacerbate that situation,” Wylie added. “Rebuilding Houston will also likely draw constructi­on workers from around the country and Florida as well. It is too early to tell the extent and impact.”

He said he wasn’t aware of any notable flooding at constructi­on sites and added that contractor­s had not yet complained of significan­t roof damage.

Wylie said it wouldn’t be surprising to hear of some damage to unsecured equipment during teh storm, such as a pair of cranes that were damaged in Miami.

 ?? PHOTOS COURTESY OF THE GREATER ORLANDO BUILDERS’ ASSOCIATIO­N ?? The headquarte­rs of the Greater Orlando Builders’ Associatio­n in Maitland was heavily damaged when a tree fell through its roof during Hurricane Irma.
PHOTOS COURTESY OF THE GREATER ORLANDO BUILDERS’ ASSOCIATIO­N The headquarte­rs of the Greater Orlando Builders’ Associatio­n in Maitland was heavily damaged when a tree fell through its roof during Hurricane Irma.
 ??  ?? The associatio­n’s president said members swiftly took action to remove the downed tree, clear away debris and repair much of the damage after the storm.
The associatio­n’s president said members swiftly took action to remove the downed tree, clear away debris and repair much of the damage after the storm.

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