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News

Center of controversy

Plan for Community Center has "taken on a life of its own," Sustainable Takoma says

Construction on the Takoma Park Community Center began in early July, and is scheduled to be completed as currently planned by the start of 2005. But the Community Center's original plan, its current plann, and what the city hopes the final results will be are all different.

As of this month, there is no money for the gym, the underground parking, or the Victorian façade, and the community is voicing concern that the center will bear little resemblance to the plan they lent their support to three years ago. Howard Kohn, president of the Citizens Liaison Committee, said the gym, the parking garage, and the façade are all on hold, pending money from the state and from private donors.

Kohn said that the construction company has made an agreement with the city, which states that if the city can come up with the $1.4 million necessary before the rest of the community center is completed, the gym and the underground parking will be added.

The building, if it gets a gym, would more than triple the size of the original city hall, going from 13,000 square feet to 40,000 square feet. It will include rooms for classes and meetings, a reading room with card tables for seniors, a "hangout room" with chairs and a sofa, game rooms, a dance room that would also be used for aerobics and karate, arts rooms, a computer lab, a performance stage, and a kitchen.

"The only two items that are delayed are the gym and the underground parking," Kohn said.

City Manager Rick Finn said that the city council wants to fund the completion of the façade.

The city also plans to run a fundraising campaign selling monogram bricks, where people would pay to have a name or a few words written on a brick. The money raised would go toward furnishings in the community center.

The city ran into financial problems when the construction site was discovered to lie on a floodplain. This led to the necessity of a flood control wall to deflect drainage to another area.

Finn said that as a result of the financial problems, the city has already redirected $393,000 from the Open Space Program to the community center, and they may take as much as $500,000 from the storm water fund. He also said that the contingency fee, which is the money left available if construction costs run over, is only five percent. A normal contingency fee would be between 15 and 20 percent.

Sustainable Takoma, a community group created in February, has voiced concerns about the direction in which plans are going for the community center. Co-chair Alain Thery said that he is worried about a number of community issues that could arise as a result of the center, such as debt to the city and the possibility of a mid-year rise in storm water fees.

Thery is also concerned about the fact that there is currently no money for a gym. The city council is "hoping for a miracle" from private donors, he said.

"City hall is going to have new offices; we will have a huge debt," he said."The initial idea of the community center is sound, but it has taken on a life of its own. I cannot conceive how it is related to the original objective."

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