In October, DePaul athletic director Jean Lenti Ponsetto praised the open communication between the Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority and DePaul, saying how DePaul has been kept up to date in the process.
In December, it was announced that process will cost more than previously planned.
The Executive Committee of the Board of Trustees voted on Dec. 8 to pay $12.5 million more than the original estimated $70-75 million for the university’s new basketball arena in the South Loop, bringing the new estimated amount to $82.5 million.
In a memo circulated to faculty, former interim president Patricia O’Donoghue said that the building has been redesigned, “raising it to ground level and accepting a number of other engineering changes.” The changes are the reason for the increased cost.
O’Donoghue said that the change in cost won’t affect student tuition or the operating budgets in place, despite university-wide mandated cuts in spending at the end of the fiscal year.
“DePaul has built or renovated more than a dozen buildings in the past 15 years, and is well familiar with having to adjust the funding or change the design for projects as costs become clearer once they are bid to contractors,” O’Donoghue said in a memo. “Thankfully, DePaul’s commitment to complete the project with no impact to student tuition or operation budgets remains in place.
“Current estimates continue to show that naming rights, corporate sponsorships, ticket sales and fundraising will offset the anticipated project construction cost increases,” she said.
The total cost of the arena construction will be
$164 million between DePaul and the Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority (McPier), $150 million for the Event Center’s construction and an additional $14 million for “soft costs.” McPier also paid
$40 million for the cost of the land, which is located on the corner Prairie Avenue and Cermak Road.
In a press release Nov. 25, McPier said that they and DePaul asked the design firm Pelli Clarke Pelli to adjust the initial design to bring the arena floor to street level and add 12 feet of height to the building.
To shoulder the increase of costs, DePaul and McPier will split the estimated 25 million in half.
“DePaul is making a substantial investment in this facility along with (McPier). We would not have been able to build the event center without DePaul’s participation,” McPier CEO Jim Reilly said in the release. “In addition, the University will pay at- or above-market rent for using the facility. When you add it all up, DePaul is getting its long-sought home court in Chicago while also supporting the city’s tourism and convention industry.”
The project is slated to break ground in the second quarter of 2015, delayed further from the original estimated start date of January. Handling the construction will be “The Prairie District Partners,” a construction group composed of Clark Construction Group-Chicago LLC, Bulley & Andrews LLC, McKissack & McKissack Midwest, Old Veteran Construction, Goettsch Partners and Moody Nolan.
The completion of the project is anticipated to be finished in 2017.
Hammad • Apr 29, 2015 at 3:03 pm
Why would they do this? DePaul students don’t even go to games. How about they redo Byrne Hall? That entire building is a fire hazard. I don’t want a DePaul known for its’ sports team. I want a DePaul known for its’ cutting edge facilities and resources. How about instead of a stadium for sports teams that the students don’t support or even know exist, they build new labs, more wi-fi servers for faster internet, and subsidies for textbooks or increased financial aid? This is a terrible use of student money.
Nick • Jan 25, 2015 at 10:51 pm
I think the new stadium will be great for the city, the school and recruiting for DePaul sports
Boyee • Jan 15, 2015 at 1:27 am
This arena would be much better if it were built on the former A. Finkl & Sons Co. property in Lincoln Park, not too far from the Lincoln Park Campus. I’m sure DePaul University could negotiate to have enough land for the arena and parking removed from the PMD.
Tim • Jan 12, 2015 at 2:56 pm
So DePaul not only has to pay a majority of the cost for development, but they also have to pay rent for using it? Seems a little off..