mjwalsh
6 bay SS w/laundromat
The joys of working with different gov't mandates!??? Our city has determined that the existing hard surface of the property away from our building to the curb is not good enough. Think in terms of well over $15-$25K in costs. They have a list of 52 lic & bonded by the city that we can contract directly as an option. Whatever chosen contractor has to pay 11% of their bid to the city for their permit which of course is included in the the bids we will receive ... obviously. The 11% added $$$ charged by the city is their standard for their hopefully exemplary inspections & other approval documents. We are leaning towards using an allowed option of concreting the entire boulevard.
The reason for this thread is to possibly gain some outside insight about what the civil engineering department is talking about when they say the sidewalk can not just extend out to the curb ... kind of making the sidewalk over 15 feet ... they will allow that greater than 6' sidewalk width ... if the non sidewalk is stamped concrete special gray to make it ADA compliant. Anybody with thoughts or experience on this. For over 25 years now we have always cleared snow 100% off of the entire city owned boulevards but never planted trees, shrubs, flowers like they have been known to advocate from time to time. No snow piles on our boulevards make the local PD happy because it help to lessen the danger of a snow pile impairing a driver's visibility when entering or exiting from the two streets ... we are a corner lot. We would rather not be bringing in a bunch of black dirt for our specific corner lot. Maybe hanging flowers in the laundromat itself but it seems like that shrubs-flowers amenity outdoors as part of the more vulnerable boulevard landscaping could turn out to be more maintenance that we would prefer.
We have a short construction season here in North Dakota & concrete contractors tend to get booked up early in the season. That makes our decision very quickly somewhat urgent as to how we beautify out boulevards. An alternative is to not respond & just let them show up with their chosen crews & boink us with possibly a "less value driven special assessment" than if we chose our own contractor & had more input on the how it is done. Another issue is that they require 3 trench drains. We are seeking to make sure the trench drain is better than the below photo of a close-by elementary public school's trench drain that is in the process of being repaired partially by using a cutting torch. As you can see ... during snow removal a heavy skidsteer's tire made the trench drain collapse & become uneven.
There is a lot of experience on this forum ... any thoughts &/or suggestions???
The reason for this thread is to possibly gain some outside insight about what the civil engineering department is talking about when they say the sidewalk can not just extend out to the curb ... kind of making the sidewalk over 15 feet ... they will allow that greater than 6' sidewalk width ... if the non sidewalk is stamped concrete special gray to make it ADA compliant. Anybody with thoughts or experience on this. For over 25 years now we have always cleared snow 100% off of the entire city owned boulevards but never planted trees, shrubs, flowers like they have been known to advocate from time to time. No snow piles on our boulevards make the local PD happy because it help to lessen the danger of a snow pile impairing a driver's visibility when entering or exiting from the two streets ... we are a corner lot. We would rather not be bringing in a bunch of black dirt for our specific corner lot. Maybe hanging flowers in the laundromat itself but it seems like that shrubs-flowers amenity outdoors as part of the more vulnerable boulevard landscaping could turn out to be more maintenance that we would prefer.
We have a short construction season here in North Dakota & concrete contractors tend to get booked up early in the season. That makes our decision very quickly somewhat urgent as to how we beautify out boulevards. An alternative is to not respond & just let them show up with their chosen crews & boink us with possibly a "less value driven special assessment" than if we chose our own contractor & had more input on the how it is done. Another issue is that they require 3 trench drains. We are seeking to make sure the trench drain is better than the below photo of a close-by elementary public school's trench drain that is in the process of being repaired partially by using a cutting torch. As you can see ... during snow removal a heavy skidsteer's tire made the trench drain collapse & become uneven.
There is a lot of experience on this forum ... any thoughts &/or suggestions???