The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Township mulls 4 options for new facilities

- By Evan Brandt ebrandt@21st-centurymed­ia.com @PottstownN­ews on Twitter

NEW HANOVER » Township supervisor­s are mulling four options for the township building and police station.

Currently, township administra­tion and police share the same 6,150-square-foot building.

The building was built in 1976, has a leaky roof, and space has become too cramped for the growing department­s.

The township has been considerin­g how to move forward since 2018.

On Thursday night, architects from Alloy 5 reviewed the options with the supervisor­s. They range in price from $3.7 million to $5.6 million. Each of the options has an accompanyi­ng list of pros and cons.

Cons, depending on the option, include the possibilit­y of moving the police department away from the center of population in the southern portion of the township; reducing efficienci­es that come from having all computers and utilities together.

Pros, depending on the options, include the ability to use the recreation building as a temporary location while renovation­s are conducted; separating police and administra­tive functions; additional square feet in both buildings for growth.

Discussion of those options is on the agenda for the Oct. 1 supervisor­s meeting, according to

Township Manager Jamie Gwynn.

It is unclear whether a decision is likely at that meeting.

Renovate the existing township building on Route 662 and the recreation center on Hoffmansvi­lle Road.

The township building would then be devoted entirely to administra­tion and the recreation center would become the police headquarte­rs.

That option has a price estimate of $3.8 million to $4.5 million.

Option 2

This option reverses Option 1, with the police taking over a renovated township building on Route 663 and the administra­tion moving to a renovated parks and recreation building on Hoffmansvi­lle Road.

Option 2 has an estimated price range of $3.7 million to $4.4 million.

Option 3

This option would have the existing township building renovated entirely for use by the administra­tion and a new 6,500 squarefoot police station being constructe­d on the adjacent property.

Option 3 has an estimated price range of $4.4 million to $5.4 million.

Option 4

This option would have police and administra­tion remain in the renovated building, which would be expanded to connect to the current public works building, creating a 12,400 square-foot space.

Then a new 3,000 squarefoot public works building would be constructe­d on the site.

This option has an estimated price range between $4.7 million and $5.6 million.

The architect’s report also included a “baseline” for what would be involved and what it would cost to replace the current arrangemen­t and build an entirely new 13,000 squarefoot building on the site for both police and administra­tion.

The estimated cost for that option, which is apparently not being considered, is $5.5 million to $6.6 million.

This article first appeared as a post in The Digital Notebook blog.

 ?? MEDIANEWS GROUP FILE PHOTO ?? The current township building on North Charlotte Street, built in 1976, houses both the police department and the administra­tive offices, and has a very leaky roof.
MEDIANEWS GROUP FILE PHOTO The current township building on North Charlotte Street, built in 1976, houses both the police department and the administra­tive offices, and has a very leaky roof.

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