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What will the new White Stadium actually cost?
What will the new White Stadium actually cost?

Boston Globe

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • Boston Globe

What will the new White Stadium actually cost?

Get The Gavel A weekly SCOTUS explainer newsletter by columnist Kimberly Atkins Stohr. Enter Email Sign Up The 50-50 split with the soccer club was a bargain at its original cost to the city of $50 million. Then some six months later that number rose to $91 million. Advertisement Now Mayor Michelle Wu insists she won't know until 'later this calendar year,' presumably well after the Nov. 4 general election, what the ultimate cost of the project will be — but admits it is likely to escalate once all the bids are 'out the door.' And had it not been for her chief mayoral rival, Josh Kraft, raising the issue with a document he said came 'from folks on the inside at City Hall,' that pegged the city's ultimate likely cost at $172 million, voters would have remained in the dark about further cost escalations. Advertisement 'Not sure where those numbers are coming from,' The very next day she Then last week in an interview on WBUR she acknowledged there have already been some price increases. 'There's always some level of cost escalation, unfortunately,' she said. 'In major construction projects, we end up putting out bids, and whatever the price in the market is at that moment is what the city pays, for any construction project.' 'We are seeing cost escalations in terms of the cost of steel, for example,' The city's The bids are not scheduled to be opened until October. In all, the city has spent $11.3 million on the renovation project so far, a spokesperson said, but only $5.6 million on 'construction-related activities.' Delays to the project mean the soccer team will play its inaugural 2026 season at the 65,000-seat Gillette Stadium. It plans to move to its new 11,000-seat venue in Franklin Park for the 2027 season beginning that March. But costing out that final number for Boston taxpayers gets even trickier because as its own 'supplier diversity dashboard' notes, 'This is one project being managed by two teams. Contracts awarded by the City are subject to state law regulating the procurement of services on public projects. BLFC is not subject to the same constraints, which allows them to award contracts without public procurement law constraints.' Most of those BLFC-generated bids for concrete, steel, facade restoration, utilities, and site work close Aug. 15, city officials said. Advertisement Which still begs the question of why the project's new bottom line will remain a mystery until the end of the year. And while the dashboard represents an attempt at transparency, especially for minority and female vendors and contractors looking for a piece of the stadium action, even if it were up to date, it represents at best half a loaf. It's a point not lost on Ed Gaskin, director of Greater Grove Hall Main Streets, who wrote in a recent He's not wrong. The 'City officials need to make all the construction bids they've received public, so that residents can know just how far over-budget the White Stadium project is,' Jessica Spruill, a Dorchester resident and member of the Franklin Park Defenders, wrote in a Advertisement Others in the group have raised broader questions about the project's financial viability and whether the team can meet its financing deadlines. 'The old White Stadium has been demolished, but construction of its replacement hasn't started, and it's clear that the professional soccer stadium plans are on shaky ground,' former METCO director Jean McGuire of Roxbury wrote in a Rebuilding White Stadium could still be a good idea that leaves a long-term legacy for Boston — a long-overdue first-rate facility for Boston's high school athletes and a showcase for professional women's soccer. But voters — whether they love or hate the idea of the stadium — deserve more than the promise of a post-election big reveal of its final cost. Editorials represent the views of the Boston Globe Editorial Board. Follow us

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