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Council approves CMAR to refine costs for Pilot Knoll park upgrades after staff flags failing water and sewer systems

3839573 · June 11, 2025
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Highland Village council authorized a construction-manager-at-risk (CMAR) agreement with Dean Construction to develop firm construction estimates and a guaranteed maximum price (GMP) for Pilot Knoll Park improvements after staff reported failing potable water and septic systems and higher-than-anticipated utility upgrade costs.

A majority of the Highland Village City Council on Tuesday authorized the city manager to negotiate and execute a construction-manager-at-risk contract with Dean Construction to develop a guaranteed maximum price for the Pilot Knoll Park improvement project.

The move follows staff presentations saying the park's potable water and on-site sewer systems are failing and must be replaced — a condition that sharply increased the project's projected cost. Heather, finance director, said the city is “pricing the full water and sewer upgrade to be 3,600,000.0” and that a standalone water-only replacement would be about $1,200,000 while sanitary sewer service alone was estimated at roughly $2,000,000; with engineering and a modest inflation allowance staff showed a combined, escalated package near $3.6–3.7 million.

Why this matters: Parks staff described Pilot Knoll as a long-used revenue generator for the city that currently hosts RV sites, pavilions, a boat ramp and vendor concessions. Staff said both the sewer and potable water systems are at the end of their useful life; continuing to defer replacement risks recurring service shut‑downs and lost revenue. Council approved bringing on a CMAR to provide more precise bid‑level pricing and value‑engineering suggestions before the council commits to construction dollars.

Staff presentations and debate

Phil, a parks presenter, told the council that the water main serving the park is a 2-inch line constructed from…

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