SSA Hears Progress Report on Redesign for Woods Hole Ticket Building
Architects for the Steamship Authority’s sweeping redesign of its Woods Hole terminal will soon be returning from the drawing board.
Architects for the Steamship Authority’s sweeping redesign of its Woods Hole terminal will soon be returning from the drawing board with new concept designs for the ticket building.
Public comment meetings are tentatively scheduled for mid-March, according to a schedule presented Monday to the boat line board of governors.
The comment sessions will be held on Zoom to encourage dialogue, answer questions and discuss the criteria and objectives of the building design, architect Chris Iwerks of BIA Studio told the board during its regular monthly videoconference.
After listening to the public’s responses, Mr. Iwerks said, the firm will refine its concept design and bring it back for another presentation and comment session in early June.
Coronavirus concerns have added some new wrinkles to the design process, affecting such considerations as ventilation systems, surface materials and ticket window construction, according to BIA Studio’s Lian Davis.
“The building will not be designed around socially distanced occupancies per se,” Mr. Davis said. However, he added, ticket sellers and the public will be separated by glass partitions and when necessary, ticket lines may be reduced as well.
“The Steamship Authority wanted to close every other window . . . when the need arises,” he said.
The building concept shown to the public in March will include optional solar panels and other design elements aimed at achieving net zero energy use and potentially qualifying for LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design), an international green building certification program.
Mr. Davis said the estimated construction costs won’t be available until after the schematic design process, which is currently scheduled to end in mid-June and precedes the design development phase of the project.
“We’ll have the ability during design development to go down the net zero path or not,” he said.
Mr. Iwerks noted that construction costs may be significantly offset by energy savings over the life of the new building, which he estimated at more than 50 years.
“One of the reasons LEED has been so successful is that the life cycle costs go down when you make sustainable buildings,” he said.
The architects’ timeline calls for further public presentations in mid-October and early December, with the design development phase scheduled to end Dec. 31.
Also at Monday’s meeting, boat line governors agreed to pay BIA Studio up to $885,321 for its work overseeing the terminal reconstruction project in 2021.
SSA general manager Robert Davis (no relation to Lian Davis) told governors that the contract covers administration for all construction services on the site. It also includes testing and inspections, based on the architect’s estimate of costs for subcontractor services, testing labs, and field inspectors, he said.
“That’s not to say that we can’t come in below that number,” the general manager said. “For the 2020 construction administration, they’re actually coming in a little lower [than contracted].”
Boat line governors also created a new position Monday, approving a management request to hire a senior network engineer and security analyst for the SSA’s computer systems.
Security threats and attempts to access the systems are a daily occurrence, Mr. Davis told governors.
In addition to analyzing network security, the new position would also be responsible for providing information security training to SSA staff and developing companywide security policies and procedures, among other tasks, according to a staff summary prepared by the boat line’s information technology manager, Curt Van Riper.
The company’s systems performed well on last week’s opening day for reservations, Mr. Davis said.
On Jan. 19, the first day of online reservations for the Vineyard route, the ferry line processed 14,997 transactions representing over $3.8 million in revenue, he said.
The first day of online reservations in 2020 saw 14,853 transactions totaling about $3.3 million, Mr. Davis said.
That was also the day that the SSA’s reservation system crashed almost as soon as it opened, remaining out until well after noon and running slowly thereafter.
No such blackout occurred this year, Mr. Davis said, expressing thanks to the information technology staff for reinforcing the system in advance of this year’s opening day.
Telephone reservations begin Tuesday, Mr. Davis said.
Among other business Monday, governors approved the purchase of three new electric buses for no more than $2.9 million total, with $875,000 reimburseable through grants, and agreed to waive concessionaire Centerplate’s contractual minimum payment of more than $700,000, given that on-board concessions were halted at the start of the pandemic early last year.
An earlier agreement with the Seastreak fast ferry for year-round service has been scaled back to spring, summer and early fall, Mr. Davis told the board of governors, due to a reduction in passenger demand.
Port council chairman Edward Anthes-Washburn announced that he is leaving his job as CEO and port director of the New Bedford Port Authority for a management position at Crowley Maritime, a shipping corporation based in Florida. He will remain in New Bedford, Mr. Anthes-Washburn said, and has been asked by the city’s mayor, Jon Mitchell, to remain on the port council for the time being.

Comments
Is this building still needed
Maggie V.H.Is this building still needed? It’s been so long since the tear down of the original and there doesn’t seem to be complaints. Maybe save the money so you won’t need bail out money?
How about they keep the
Mark EdgartownHow about they keep the existing ticket office and pass the savings on through reduced pricing.
Three electric buses for "no
DPBS East ChopThree electric buses for "no more than" 2.9 million? Thank goodness for fiscal responsibility. Anything over one million per bus would be excessive!
No one needs a new Wood’s
Anne EdgartownNo one needs a new Wood’s Hole Ticket Center. Scrap the plan and save tens of millions in taxpayer money. The “temporary” building has been sufficient. Spend the money on updating the archaic computer system that processes reservations. Every year the system crashes at the stroke of midnight on the day open reservations begin. It’s just plain ridiculous in this day and age when this still happens. Yet, the manager continues to get glowing reviews, while the rest of us pay for this nonsense. Such a waste of money that is not theirs! A bridge would be cheaper!!
Remember this line... it will
Jim EdgartownRemember this line... it will never happen...
“That’s not to say that we can’t come in below that number”
There is absolutely no need for this project. The “temporary“ building there are using works fine.. we need some restrooms and a place to buy tickets... and we can do that online now... why ???
Very excited about the new
Sarah EigenVery excited about the new terminal design project!
Buildings before boats. The
Nat Trumbull Woods HoleBuildings before boats. The Steamship Authority, instead of spending its cash borrowing from its bond sales on multiple oversized buildings, could be investing in infrastructure to provide for a supplemental freight route from the mainland to the islands. A supplemental freight route through an off-Cape port could provide long-awaited relief to neighbors in Falmouth and Hyannis whose quality of life is today seriously impacted from rapid growth on the islands (please excuse us, but 600 SSA trucks a day through Falmouth in summer is just too many freight trucks for the small village of Woods Hole, we are not an industrial port), provide diversification of sourcing of goods for the islands, more competitive sourcing and pricing of those goods, and redundancy of delivery of fuel and other essential supplies to the islands going forward. This could also provide a precautionary response as replacement of existing Cape Cod Canal bridges continues to be a question mark. Meanwhile, raise the existing WH temporary ticket building out of the flood plain and relocate it, the terminal is made of portable trailers.
Let's hope it looks more like
Michael OBLet's hope it looks more like New England than Manhattan.
PLEASE !!
It would have been nice if
Peter EdgartownIt would have been nice if the Gazette had reiterated the projected cost of the new building, just saying.... But then doing that would have focused the readers' minds on what an unneeded waste of money it would be.
We have lived with the "temporary" building and it functions fine. What else do we need there? Perhaps a glass canopy that provides better shielding from rain as you wait, a covered bridge (with provision for elderly and handicapped) from the temporary building to the ferry slips that unloading trucks can go under, and especially some protection from wind that blows from the side when you are waiting under the high new glass roofs next to the slips.
All else is a colossal waste money that we the travelers will be asked to pay for later.
I've been impresses with the
Kelce Oak BluffsI've been impressed with the work in Woods Hole. It's taking shape and I love the new off ramp and extra room in the lot when driving off the ferries.
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