Archive for 2009

John E. Jenkins, Inc. Completes Buffalo Wild Wings Project

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

CHARLOTTE – Gaston County-based grading and paving company John E. Jenkins, Inc. has successfully completed its fifth project in the Cox Road Retail Center in Gastonia. Buffalo Wild Wings joins Olive Garden, Ruby Tuesday, Chuck E. Cheese, and a future hotel site at the location near I-85. John E. Jenkins, Inc., has been the sole contractor to work the Cox Road Retail Center since the project began.

Joe Pearson of Pearson Properties, which is developing the Cox Road Retail Center, said,” We value the long-term relationship we enjoy with John E. Jenkins, Inc. They are always timely and responsive and provide a quality product. We are very pleased with the excellent grading and paving services they have provided for the Buffalo Wild Wings project.”

Services on the site included engineering layout, grading, erosion control, storm drainage, curb and gutter, sidewalks, asphalt paving, striping, and water and sewer. Work began on July 9 and was completed on time and within budget on October 28.

Chief estimator and project manager Steve Jackson said, “We were very pleased to have the opportunity to work with Buffalo Wild Wings on this project. Our turn-key site work project was exactly what Buffalo Wild Wings needed in order to finish the project on time and under budget. I must compliment the performance of the grading crew and their ability to keep the job on schedule. We feel that the overall site will be very attractive and an excellent addition to the Cox Road Retail Center.”

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Downtown bank demolition could be finished next week

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

Michael Barrett – Gaston Gazette

January 14, 2009 8:00 PM

The demolition of the former First Union bank building in downtown Gastonia is moving along and should be completed soon.

“It should be down by the end of next week,” said Gastonia City Manager Jim Palenick.

The project is part of the city’s effort to build a new aquatics center downtown. The demolition of the First Union building was preceded by the razing of the former Fidelity bank building in December.

Gastonia hired local contractor John Jenkins Inc. for the job. It is paying about $300,000 to tear down the two bank buildings, said assistant city manager Flip Bombardier.

Efforts to dismantle the First Union building have attracted a number of spectators this week, Bombardier said. Compared to pulling down the Fidelity building, this phase is taking longer because of some required asbestos abatement.

Workers are having to slowly remove the First Union structure’s brick façade to access some “black mastic” material on the inner wall. Simply knocking the building down could release the harmful material at the site, Palenick said.

But separating and taking away the material piece-by-piece is a federally approved method for removing it, he said.

“There is no jeopardy of any kind from the material,” Palenick said.

Once that process is completed, the main building will come down fairly quickly, officials said. Afterward, workers will continue refilling and backfilling the newly vacant block.

The next phase, to be completed by the end of February, will involve pulling down three mid-block buildings on Main Avenue, including an old theater and two former retail structures, Palenick said.

To dress up the newly vacant space fronting Main Avenue, the city will do some renovations to make the space look “park-like,” Palenick said.

In advance of building the aquatics center, the demolitions are serving a purpose of their own, he said.

“We’re removing buildings that are functionally obsolete and would never serve legitimate redevelopment opportunities,” Palenick said.

But he also believes the aquatics center project is still on track.

“We have complete confidence the project will be funded and move forward, and that plan will develop as it has been proposed,” he said.

The project – dubbed “Big Splash” – calls for a $21.6 million indoor aquatics facility and conference center downtown. The city plans to provide the land and seed money worth about $12 million, with private donations and government grants footing the rest of the bill.

Fundraising will take place over the next 15 months. In the meantime, the bank demolitions are proof that the city is serious about the endeavor, Palenick said.

“The absence of structures there is going to allow people to see how large this site really is,” he said. “It will give it a different perspective and make people realize the project is moving forward.”

You can reach Michael Barrett at 704-869-1826.