Vermont State Hospital
Buildings at the Waterbury State Office complex. Photo by Don Shall.

[T]he renovation of the Waterbury State Office Complex is almost complete, and state employees are on track to move back at the end of 2015.

The facility will house about 850 state employees, most of whom work for the Agency of Human Services, the largest agency of state government, and the Department of Public Safety.

The project has been in the works since Tropical Storm Irene in August 2011 damaged the complex. Heavy rainfall led to severe flooding and the evacuation of psychiatric patients at the Vermont State Hospital. About 1,500 state employees worked at the Waterbury complex at the time.

The facility served as an insane asylum in the 1800s. Now a modern granite building peeks out from behind rust-colored cylindrical buildings. The rusty buildings are the historical core, whose round rooms once had beds lined up in rows for psychiatric patients; the rooms are being turned into true office space. A new building, with white granite siding and a secure entrance, sits behind the historic core.

โ€œWe specifically chose that the new buildings stand out from the old buildings,โ€ said Mike Stevens, the project manager, who works for the Department of Buildings and General Services.

Stevens gave Gov. Peter Shumlinโ€™s administration and members of the news media a tour of the construction site on Thursday. Beth Pearce, the state treasurer, Jeb Spaulding, the chancellor of the Vermont State Colleges, and members of the Agency of Administration also attended.

Stevens said the construction process is 89 percent complete. Shumlin said state employees will begin occupying the facility on Dec. 19.

The project cost is in the $130 million range. The state is responsible for two-thirds of the cost, and Pearce said her office secured a low-rate bond for the project. The Federal Emergency Management Agency will pay about $36 million, and the stateโ€™s insurance company will pay about $15 million.

โ€œThe productivity of an employee is often reflected by the space they work in,โ€ Shumlin said. The new building would make state employees โ€œproductive, safe, and able to focus,โ€ he said.

Shumlin said the old building had single-pane windows that rattled, with warm hallways and freezing offices. โ€œThis is gonna be the nicest state office building of any state in the nation when weโ€™re done with it,โ€ he said.

In the new building, there will be a secure public entrance, a 100-person conference room and two 40-person conference rooms. There are skylights in some of the office spaces, and an artist is completing a mural in the foyer.

The historical buildings are being brightened up, including in the old stairwells, which have an eerie quality during construction. Modern windows have replaced single-pane windows that didnโ€™t hold heat, and there will be air conditioning.

The buildings are built with a blue, envelope-like wrap for weatherization. A central plant to the west of the main building complex will control heating and cooling, and a driveway surrounds the main campus. The complex will use 40 percent of the energy the building used back in 2011, according to Stevens.

The former Vermont State Hospital was taken down over a year ago in favor of a decentralized mental health system. A new hospital, the Vermont Psychiatric Care Center, is up and running in Berlin, and each county has a designated agency for community mental health care.

The Waterbury campusโ€™ chimney stack in the back, marked with the letters VSH, will stay, and state employees will be able to see it from floor-to-ceiling windows in all of the three conference rooms. Stevens said the community gathered enough support to stop the chimney stack’s destruction.

Rep. Tom Stevens, D-Waterbury, said heโ€™s โ€œvery impressed by the progress of the project.โ€ He was one of the more than one dozen people who attended Thursdayโ€™s media tour.

โ€œThis whole space has been redesigned,โ€ Stevens said. โ€œBefore, we made do with just a lot of existing space. People worked in hallways. People worked in closets. They had offices in bedrooms.โ€

Rep. Stevens said completing the project would end the need for the state to pour money into maintaining old buildings and โ€œbring stability to our village for another several generations.โ€

CORRECTION: A previous version of this article incorrectly used Gov. Peter Shumlin’s remarks as fact and called the brick chimney stack on the Waterbury campus a crematorium.

Twitter: @erin_vt. Erin Mansfield covers health care and business for VTDigger. From 2013 to 2015, she wrote for the Rutland Herald and Times Argus. Erin holds a B.A. in Economics and Spanish from the...

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