City construction managers told the Gonzales City Council May 19 that the downtown community center is largely weather‑tight and progressing on schedule, but the project remains dependent on permanent power delivery and switchgear installation.
"We have completed installation of all of the underground utilities on the project ..." Construction manager Luis Flores said, listing milestones that include underground water, sewer and storm connections; rough‑in of mechanical, electrical and plumbing; storefront/glazing and both roof types installed so the building is weather‑tight as of March.
Assistant project manager Tyler Verdun described exterior and interior progress: exterior EIFS base and finish coats are largely finished, storefront pressure caps and flashing are installed, interior drywall taping and finishing is in progress, casework is installed in two locations, and ceramic restroom tile is underway. Site work updates included poured seat walls, planter walls adjacent to the library, concrete work for pathways and an amphitheater base, light‑pole bases and transformers for six dual‑head EV chargers.
The team listed upcoming milestones in the presentation: landscaping substantial completion on July 11, permanent power on Oct. 27 and substantial completion on Nov. 17. Contractors and staff repeatedly flagged electrical switchgear and PG&E scheduling as the primary remaining risk. At one point in the meeting, Tyler Verdun said the switchgear ETA "held steady at October 23," but during the council Q&A another staff member said the team was tracking a July 23 delivery date for the main switchgear and that installation and inspections could push readiness into August; staff acknowledged the two statements reflected changing tracking estimates and pledged to coordinate further with PG&E.
Council members asked technical questions about building materials; when Councilmember Silva asked what "TPO" meant, staff described it as a typical commercial single‑ply roofing membrane (a thermoplastic polyolefin membrane) used for weatherproofing. Staff also reported plans for education outreach: construction‑site visits for local students the last week of school, summer sessions and construction career presentations in early fall.
Why it matters: the downtown community center will add community programming and library adjacencies. Staff said the remaining dependency on switchgear and PG&E scheduling affects when the city can occupy and open parts of the facility.
Next steps: staff said they will continue coordination with PG&E, post updated milestone schedules and organize community site visits already planned for local students and summer sessions.