enquirer.com

News
Front Page
Local
Sports
-Bengals
-Reds
-Bearcats
-Xavier
Business
Health
Technology
Weather
Traffic
Back Issues
Photographs
AP Wire
-World
-Nation
-Sports
-Business
-Arts
-Health

Classifieds
Jobs
Autos
General
Obits
Homes

Freetime
Movies
Dining
Calendars
Weekend

Opinion
Columns
Borgman

GoCinci
HelpDesk
Feedback
Circulation
Subscribe
Phone #'s
Search

E N Q U I R E R   L O C A L   N E W S   C O V E R A G E
Saturday, February 26, 2000

Stadium manager: Deadline can be met




BY DAN KLEPAL
The Cincinnati Enquirer

[stadium]
Stadium construction is two months behind schedule.
(Steven M. Herppich photo)
| ZOOM |
        The beer taps are in and the bathrooms are nearly done, but the amount of work left to do on Paul Brown Stadium is staggering. Still, Project Manager Dan Streyle says it will all get done during the next six months and that the Bengals stadium will be open for business on Aug. 19.

        Valuable time has recently been lost because the Ohio River crested above flood stage. That time will be made up with more people working more hours.

        How much all that will add to the bottom line of a 66,000-seat stadium, already estimated to cost $45 million more than expected, is unknown.

        “We've got a lot of work to do, I won't kid you,” Mr. Streyle said. “But I'm still feeling pretty confident that we'll make the deadline.” Each preseason game played at Cinergy Field means a $2 million penalty paid to the Bengals.

        Mr. Streyle said it's impossible for him to estimate how many more days lost would cause the project to miss the deadline.

        “We're at the stage that we never lose a full day of work because we'll always be able to work in some places,” he said. “I can't answer that.”

        Mr. Streyle and the county's public relations people took the media on a tour of the facility Friday.

        He would not address cost overruns that an audit blamed on lax oversight over hundreds of changes.

        County commissioners last week approved an additional $14 million to keep work moving.

        The auditor laid most of the blame for the cost overruns with the stadium project team, consisting of construction manager Turner Barton Malow D.A.G., project man ager Getz Ventures and architect NBBJ.

        County records show the project team has been paid more than $40 million of taxpayer money to date — $20.7 million to NBBJ, $17.4 million to Turner and $3.3 million to Getz.

        “We have not had a chance to meet with the auditor,” said Mr. Streyle, who is a Getz employee. He said that meeting likely will happen next week.

        There are about 800 em ployees working on the stadium on a typical day.

        “It all very much has to be choreographed,” said Mr. Streyle, who estimates the stadium to be 70 percent complete.

        The thousands of individual tasks happening at the stadium include:

        • Assembling the large scoreboard in the south end zone.

        • Seat mounts are being riveted into the concrete.

        • The building's facade is being put on.

        • Crews are preparing to pour concrete in the plaza level.

        Mr. Streyle said there will be a lot of work to do after the stadium opens, but that everything needed to safely host a football game will be in the stadium for the first game.

        Things not completed by the deadline could include landscaping and painting; some individual light fixtures and signs could need hanging.

       



Zoo chief stepping down after 38 years
Here's what we love/hate about teachers
McCain caravan coming down I-71
FWW builders planned better for surprises
- Stadium manager: Deadline can be met
Folks bask in record warmth
Prosecutor looks into agency purchases
11 child sex cases dismissed
Aquarium: No penguin progeny yet
Boone may block hotel tax
Mardi Gras in Covington next weekend
Bedinghaus leads in cash
Bunning endorses Bush
GOP official: Ky. to vote Republican
Librarian sues for Sundays off
Man dies in wrong-way crash on I-75
Mom sentenced for allowing sex
Oak Ridge Boys play at Princeton High
Queen City's moments to shine reflected in book
GET TO IT
Orchestra blooms under Carlos Kalmar's baton
Bowman to head parks
Boy, 2, drowns in pool
City golf courses find competition tough
County courses ready to tee off
Delay may vex school district
Eye tests ensure pupils master A-B-SEEs
Fire levy would allow new hiring
Meeting broke sunshine law
Taft OKs flood help for Adams County
TRISTATE DIGEST


 
Search | Questions/help | News tips | Letters to the editors
Web advertising | Place a classified | Subscribe | Circulation

Copyright 1995-2000. The Cincinnati Enquirer, a Gannett Co. Inc. newspaper.
Use of this site signifies agreement to terms of service updated 4/5/2000.