Drainage flaws plague ESC
Design flaws at the year-old Emergency
Services Center in Whitefish were brought to light at the City
Council’s May 31 work session. Whitefish Municipal Judge Bradley
Johnson noted in a memo to the council that “the building has had
some major mechanical problems.” Bradley cited issues with the
heating and air circulation, with water leaks both into and out of
the complex, and with the building’s drainage system.
The $5.3 million, 32,656-square-foot
building opened in June of 2010 and houses the police and fire
departments and municipal court. Swank Enterprises of Kalispell led
the construction effort, and Grover + Company out of Missoula
worked on the design.
The most critical flaw, Johnson notes,
is with the building’s drainage. When snow melts from the heated
roof, water pours onto the sidewalk and flows into the parking lot
creating “dangerous conditions.”
The outside parking lot accumulated and
held surface ice for most of the winter,” Johnson noted.
“Many people have fallen in the parking
lot,” he said. “Winter walking on the parking lot surfaces and
especially on the sidewalks is treacherous.
“It’s a tort claim awaiting an
appropriate plaintiff.”
Public Works director John Wilson
agreed that there are some “shortcomings with the drainage
design.”
“Some drainage didn’t direct water to
the best places,” he said.
Drainage issues have also led to water
breaching some walls in the court offices. Water seeped in after
ice build-up led to ponding outside of the offices. Ponding also
allowed water to drain into an electrical conduit leading into the
court room. Water then dripped through the court’s ceiling and
damage some ceiling tiles.
Ponding was also to blame for cracked
concrete at the building’s entrance. The excess water shoved up a
portion of the sidewalk at the entry, deeming the front door
unusable. That section of concrete was removed and replaced with
plywood.
Grover + Company has been working on a
remedy for the drainage flaws, Wilson said.
“I didn’t get any excuses from [Grover
+ Company] when we walked around the building,” Wilson said.
Councilors were concerned about who
will foot the bill to fix the drainage.
“Those should all be the responsibility
of the contractor or designer,” councilor Bill Kahle said.
Wilson expects Grover + Company will
take care of the work at no charge.
Ventilation issues cited by Johnson are
related to smells that waft from one department to another.
Cleaning solvent fumes circulate through the air, Johnson said,
“and have caused a minor disruption during a jury trial.” Cooking
smells have also been noted to move freely within the ESC.
Fire Chief Tom Kennelly said the
cleaning smells were from the fire department using too strong of a
Pine-Sol concentrate when cleaning their quarters. The department
has addressed the issue by using a less potent cleaner. The court
has learned to ventilate the offices when the fumes become too
concentrated.
A leak in the ceiling above the
complex’s computer server room was a cause of concern due to the
amount of high-tech equipment being stored in the area. The water
was coming in from an area where the fire department dries out its
wet equipment. A special membrane will be used to prevent further
leaks.
It was also noted at the work session
that seven small heating radiator units in the ceiling ruptured
during a deep freeze last winter causing damage to alarm equipment
and ceiling tiles. The problem was traced back to a malfunction in
the master radiator. Swank Enterprises addressed the issue.
Both the fire department and court have
cited problems with the heating system and electric space heaters
are being used until the design defect is resolved.