Sherburne Village’s DPW/electric building underway
SHERBURNE – Construction has begun on the Sherburne Village Department of Public Works and Electric facility at 13-27 Classic St.
The $1.4 million building project will put both municipal services under one roof and open up additional lots at the site for future business development, said Mayor Bill Acee at a press conference Friday morning.
The new building will house two vehicles and a chipper that are presently stored outside, plus much of the road maintenance materials currently stored in the pole yard. It will have restrooms, a training room and facilities to house other line crews.
Acee said the present shop, built back in 1907, lacks sufficient depth and height for late model trucks that have higher chassis in part due to emissions standards.
“The present building was built for a small generator and coal storage - way before a bucket truck was even thought of,” he said.
At 15,000 square feet, the facility doubles the amount of space currently available. Acee said energy conservation measures such as high efficiency lighting, including LED lighting, motion activated room lighting and a 10 kW solar panel system will save the village on upkeep and energy costs. The structure will meet 2011 building codes for insulation.
Grayledge Construction of Syracuse is the builder and NBT Bank provided financing for the project.
“We are doing our best to be good neighbors,” the mayor said, explaining that all exterior lighting are night-sky friendly and the eaves’ height was kept low and paint colors selected to blend the building in with the surroundings. Acee said the village’s tree commission will be consulted for plantings.
“This is designed for function. It’s no frills,” he said.
The $1.4 million building project will put both municipal services under one roof and open up additional lots at the site for future business development, said Mayor Bill Acee at a press conference Friday morning.
The new building will house two vehicles and a chipper that are presently stored outside, plus much of the road maintenance materials currently stored in the pole yard. It will have restrooms, a training room and facilities to house other line crews.
Acee said the present shop, built back in 1907, lacks sufficient depth and height for late model trucks that have higher chassis in part due to emissions standards.
“The present building was built for a small generator and coal storage - way before a bucket truck was even thought of,” he said.
At 15,000 square feet, the facility doubles the amount of space currently available. Acee said energy conservation measures such as high efficiency lighting, including LED lighting, motion activated room lighting and a 10 kW solar panel system will save the village on upkeep and energy costs. The structure will meet 2011 building codes for insulation.
Grayledge Construction of Syracuse is the builder and NBT Bank provided financing for the project.
“We are doing our best to be good neighbors,” the mayor said, explaining that all exterior lighting are night-sky friendly and the eaves’ height was kept low and paint colors selected to blend the building in with the surroundings. Acee said the village’s tree commission will be consulted for plantings.
“This is designed for function. It’s no frills,” he said.
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