Construction
Throughout Rio Grande Valley Remains Robust
Area Enjoys Construction Boom
That Comes With Population Growth
By Mark Rea
Uncertainties stemming from a roller-coaster economy and
rising costs of Operation Iraqi Freedom have combined to keep
the construction industry sputtering along in most parts of
the United States.
One of the exceptions continues to be Texas as metropolitan
areas such as Houston, Austin and the Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex
seem to continue to boast a wide variety of large and midsize
projects in a myriad of arenas.
But the continued success enjoyed by the Texas construction
industry is not limited to the large cities. The vast Rio
Grande Valley, particularly the most southern portion that
stretches from Laredo to Brownsville, has experienced tremendous
growth during the last decade in population and the construction
associated with it.
Small border towns such as Rio Grande City, Mission, Edinburg,
Pharr, Mercedes and San Benito that were once merely dots
on the Texas map, have watched their populations swell in
recent years. As a result, the need for additional housing,
infrastructure, schools, retail stores and eateries has grown
at a high rate.
The same holds true for the larger, more-established cities
of Laredo, McAllen, Harlingen and Brownsville. According to
McGraw-Hill Construction Dodge reports in early April, more
than a dozen projects worth $5 million or more were under
construction in Laredo and the surrounding Webb County area.
Included were a pair of high-profile ventures: a $35 million
second campus at Laredo Community College and the new $33.7
million Laredo Federal Courthouse.
Meanwhile, the Texas Department of Transportation has taken
steps to address the need for additional highways in the area.
Already under way are expansion projects of the U.S. Highway
83 and 77 intersection in Harlingen and upgrades of U.S. 83
as it makes it way between McAllen and Harlingen. Those two
projects alone carry a combined value of more than $143.8
million.
"These are the types of projects we are addressing,"
said TxDOT executive director Michael Behrens. "That
area has experienced a tremendous amount of growth in the
past few years and alleviating congestion on Texas roadways
and making them safer for Texas motorists is our department's
top priority."
Those two highway projects were among more than 50 identified
in early April by McGraw-Hill Construction Dodge currently
under way in Texas' southernmost counties of Starr, Hidalgo,
Willacy and Cameron, projects boasting combined contract values
of nearly $650 million.
Most local officials agree the enactment of the North American
Free Trade Agreement between Canada, the United States and
Mexico in 1994 brought about much of the area's growth. Truck
traffic makes its way along U.S. 77 from the border towns
of Matamoros and Brownsville fans out toward Corpus Christi
and Laredo before heading to San Antonio and other points
farther north.
"I don't think there's any question that NAFTA is a
big part of it," said Conrad Qualley, project manager
for Sherman-based Mitchell Enterprises overseeing construction
of Laredo's new federal courthouse. "There are two major
highways between Laredo and Monterrey (Mexico) and then the
Interstate 35 corridor heading north.
"Our trucking crossing the bridge has gone from around
300 to 500 per day in the pre-NAFTA days to about 5,000 trucks
per day over four bridges. And a fifth bridge is in the planning
stage. I think 99 percent of our growth is due to the increased
trade with Mexico, much of which goes right through Laredo."
Qualley has lived in the Valley for nearly 30 years and has
seen marked change throughout the area during that time.
"Laredo has been booming more and for a longer time
than the rest of the Valley, which is just now catching up,"
he said. "But that is because of the proximity to Monterrey,
which is the industrial capital of Mexico. Laredo has been
experiencing a boom for pretty much all of the last 10 years.
We reached the peak probably about two years ago, but there
is still a lot going on here."
While Monterrey and Nuevo Laredo have grown exponentially
with manufacturing plants, Laredo continues to build warehousing
and forwarding facilities.
"For example, the last survey I saw said that Laredo
was the second-fastest growing city in terms of construction
in the United States, trailing only Las Vegas," Qualley
said. "Of course, I'm a little prejudiced, but since
Las Vegas blows up its old buildings and builds new ones on
top of them, the fact that we're building all new down here
should make us number one."
Population Overflow
While Laredo's population expands past the 200,000 mark,
some of the overflow has already migrated to the southeast
toward McAllen, Harlingen and Brownsville.
The small town of Hidalgo, situated across the border from
the burgeoning Mexican city of Reynosa, has grown in population
from just over 5,000 less than five years ago to more than
8,500. As a result, large construction projects are cropping
up throughout the area including the $18 million Rio Grande
Valley Events Center. The 6,500-seat multipurpose facility
will soon be home to the city's new Central Hockey League
franchise and a variety of other events.
"The events center is easily the largest project in
this part of the Lower Valley since the Texas State Bank was
built four or five years ago," said Virgil Gonzalez,
a building and code enforcement office for the City of Hidalgo.
"We have experienced a lot of steady growth in the past
five years or so.
"I've been with the city about three years and in that
time we have experienced a huge growth in the residential
and commercial construction. We average about 12 to 17 houses
per month just in residential and probably two or three good-sized
commercial projects."
Gonzalez agreed that NAFTA was one of the reasons for the
growth of smaller cities along the Rio Grande. "But another
reason, I think, is people wanting to get away from some of
the larger city areas," he said. "Hidalgo is not
very big, but we have a city that provides the full scale
of services that larger cities have but we offer them within
a small community."
Pharr-based Williamson Construction won the contract for
building the events center and although project manager Gonzalo
Rodriguez said it was one of the company's largest projects
ever, he expected there would be similar projects being built
in the area in the near future.
"When I first arrived here, everyone in this area said,
'Oh, this construction cycle will last about five years and
then it will die down like it does in every other city,'"
he said. "Well, I've been here 10 years now and it never
has. It's been growing, it continues to grow and it will just
keep on growing. I don't see any signs that it will ever stop,
at least in the foreseeable future."
Strong Forecast
The area's economic forecast for 2003 appears to back up
Rodriguez's claims. According to the McAllen Chamber of Commerce,
new construction increased a whopping 11.9 percent in 2002
in the area encompassing McAllen, Edinburg, Mission and Pharr.
Likewise, new housing starts moved ahead by 18.4 percent
and retail sales grew at a rate of 6 percent. And the organization
predicted the trend would continue.
"I think our area continues to be extremely strong in
terms of housing construction and total construction,"
said chamber president and CEO Steve Ahlenius.
Part of Ahlenius' bright forecast stems from the fact that
interest rates are expected to remain low in 2003, which means
there should be plenty of money still available for new building
projects throughout the Valley.
One of those projects was unveiled in early March when the
Brownsville Urban System and Fort Worth-based engineering
and consulting firm Carter & Burgess Inc. unveiled plans
for a one-stop transportation outlet designed to enhance downtown
activity and facilitate connections across the international
bridges to Mexico.
The proposed terminal would increase the amount of transit
bays from the Market Square bus terminal in Brownsville as
well as add 15 intercity bus bays. A parking garage, retail
outlets, restaurants, rental car establishments and a visitor
information center are also part of the plans.
The terminal, which is expected to become operational in
about three years, will cost an estimated $8.7 million with
the 290-space parking garage valued at an additional $2.75
million.
Project officials indicated they would seek between 50 and
80 percent federal funding and have identified other revenue
sources, such as developing retail space, advertising revenue
and lease payments.
Increased Infrastructure
Increased population throughout the Rio Grande Valley means
upgrades to other infrastructure services as well as roadways,
bus terminals and other transportation-related facilities.
Construction began late last year on a $15.2 million water
treatment plant in McAllen. Two Houston-based companies are
in charge of the project: Environmental Infrastructure Group
is the general contractor while Montgomery Watson Americas
Inc. is serving as the civil engineer.
Two other key members of the project team are local firms,
however. The IDEA Group Inc. of McAllen is serving as architect
while Edinburg-based Melden & Hunt Engineers Inc. is the
consulting engineer.
The plant is scheduled to handle up to 8.25 million gallons
of water per day.
Raw water facilities currently under construction include
a canal intake, raw water piping and a 200-million-gallon
storage reservoir with intake structure. The main plant's
facilities will include a low lift pump station, a flocculation/sedimentation
basin with chlorine dioxide disinfection chamber, dual-media
filters, a transfer pump station and associated yard piping.
Additionally, sludge handling facilities are part of the
project including a backwash equalization basin, a plate settler,
lagoons and decant pump station. There are also ancillary
facilities such as a chemical building and chemical feed systems,
buildings for electrical and operations, paving, drainage
and landscaping.
|