County Employees on the Move
/General Services is always working to improve County facilities, not just for us but for the customers we serve.
And this year will be no different. That means a number of us will soon move into new or remodeled spaces, offices or buildings, and in some cases, to entirely new locations.
These facilities will be modern, efficient and environmentally friendly. More are being designed to respect those who visit them and show even passersby how well a facility fits in with a neighborhood’s culture.
Where once it was enough for a new facility to be built on budget and on time, now much more is taken into consideration.
In recent years, we’ve built to Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) standards and Zero Net Energy which means a facility produces more energy than the building consumes over the course of a year.
Now we’re reducing embodied carbon too. Embodied carbon represents the emissions made in the manufacture, transport, use and disposal of building materials.
General Services is reducing embodied carbon by using concrete with less cement, more energy-efficient produced steel and replacing some steel and concrete altogether with wood.
Now that you’re up to date, here’s a look at new facilities scheduled for 2024 and highlights of building openings in 2023.
OPENINGS SCHEDULED FOR 2024
Youth Transition Campus Phase 2: Phase two of construction is just about completed at the Youth Transition Campus in Kearny Mesa. The first phase was completed in January 2022 and it replaced your “typical” detention facility with one more in line with a school campus. Currently, it features eight housing units with a total of 96 beds, a dining building, a school complex with an open courtyard, a gymnasium, an amphitheater and a stage. Basketball and handball courts stand next to the housing units. The new phase saw a Youth Development Center office building open in October. A six-housing unit, 72-bed campus with its own education complex is scheduled to open in March.
Tri-City Psychiatric Health Facility: Builders are working on a new 13,560-square-foot,16-bed facility for psychiatric inpatient care in Oceanside. The groundbreaking took place in October 2022 on vacant land at the Tri-City Medical Center campus. The County and the medical center worked together to plan, design and build the new facility. Tri-City will operate the facility. The addition will bolster behavioral health care needs in the region. The opening is scheduled for this summer.
Ramona Community Resource Center: Construction began on a new 7,400-square-foot zero net energy facility on the Ramona Intergenerational Community Campus. The new building will be the latest addition to the campus. A County library is already on site and an affordable housing complex could go up next year. Meantime, the resource center will offer self-sufficiency programs and include Public Health, Behavioral Health and Child & Family Strengthening services. The resource center could open late this year.
Libraries: The Rancho San Diego branch expanded its Friends of the Library area by 400 square feet and reopened to the public last month.
Workers are putting the finishing touches to a new 2,500-square-foot community room at the Julian library branch. The new addition could open sometime this month.
NEW BEGINNINGS
Public Health Lab/Parking Structure/COC Consolidation: Expect some big changes at the County Operations Center. Construction is underway on a new $91 million public health lab.
The two-story, 52,000-square-foot building will be three times the size of the old, outdated lab at the now vacant Health Services Complex on Rosecrans. The new lab is designed to achieve a minimum of LEED Gold certification. The building will feature solar panels on its roof and General Services will use strategies to reduce embodied carbon during construction.
The lab will fit nearly 90 employees and contractors, and still allow room to grow.
Next door, remodeling on the existing 5530 building will allow 700 Public Health Services staff to move into the four-story, 150,000-square-foot building.
The facility is one of four similar office buildings on the campus. General Services worked with departments in those four office buildings to consolidate existing staff into three of them. Existing hybrid work schedules and desk sharing made it possible. The consolidation effort will complete in spring 2025.
The consolidation saved the County from building a replacement for the Health Services Complex, resulting in a cost avoidance of $150 million.
A $35 million parking structure is going up just north of the new public health lab. Workers are using embodied carbon reduction strategies during construction. Once completed, the structure will feature 725 spaces, 146 electric vehicle charging stations and solar panels on the top level. The parking structure is expected to open in September and the lab in spring 2025.
East Region Crisis Stabilization Unit: The County’s seventh crisis stabilization unit is going up in El Cajon at the former site of the Assessor/Recorder/County Clerk’s office. The facility will measure about 14,000 square feet and offer services to several East County communities. It is expected to open its doors in late 2025.
MAJOR RENOVATIONS/REMODELING/DEMOLITIONS (underway or future)
County Administration Center: Scaffolding still surrounds the building, but workers are making progress replacing the old terracotta roof tiles with new ones. This multiple phase renovation project involved replacing or updating mechanical, electrical and plumbing systems, painting the exterior, modernizing elevators, updating fire protection systems, performing seismic retrofits and refurbishing nearly 600 historic windows. The CAC should be back up to speed in late 2025.
HHSA Facilities: Two HHSA buildings were demolished to make way for affordable housing. The two vacant properties are in the City of San Diego. They include the former Northeast Family Resource Center at 5001 73rd Street in the College area. A 22,000-square-foot building once sat on the 1.26-acre property.
The second is located at 6255 Mission Gorge Road in the Grantville area. A 23,385-square-foot building sitting on 0.86 acres was knocked down. A nearby 18,731-square-foot parking lot will also be cleared.
The work will allow developers to build housing on clean lots.
PLANNING STAGES
Casa de Oro Library: A new library is in the works for the Casa de Oro neighborhood. The branch will replace the current one located at a strip mall. The new building will measure about 12,000 square feet and will include for the first time in the area a community room as well as a bookstore and large spaces designed for children and teenagers. The facility will be designed to reduce embodied carbon, earn LEED Gold certification and achieve Zero Net Energy. Groundbreaking is expected in the fall, the opening is scheduled for winter 2025-26
San Diego County Animal Shelter: Watch for a groundbreaking this spring in Santee. The state-of-the-art building will replace the Bonita facility built in 1974. The new site will include a building measuring approximately 21,000 square feet, a barn, kennels and an outdoor livestock area. The site will also temporarily house animals during local disaster events. The facility will be designed to reduce embodied carbon, earn LEED Gold certification, and achieve Zero Net Energy. The project’s completion date is set for late 2025.
A LOOK BACK AT 2023
Lakeside Library
The long-awaited Lakeside Library opened last March. The new facility is located on Woodside Ave., a few blocks away from the former site on Vine Street. The new solar-powered building measures 16,800 square feet, three times larger than the old building. The facility features a 2,000-square-foot community room, a Friends of the Library bookstore and large spaces for children and teens. The facility was designed to earn LEED Gold certification and achieve Zero Net Energy.
The Southeastern Live Well Center
The formal grand opening celebration for the new Southeastern Live Well Center took place in September. The project broke ground in fall, 2021 on a nearly five-acre site at the intersection of Market Street and Euclid Avenue.
The community played a large role in planning the sixth of the County’s Live Well Centers. The new two-story facility measures about 65,000 square feet and includes a 4,000-square-foot conference center available for community meetings. The one-stop shop offers medical insurance coverage, food and nutrition assistance, family strengthening services, financial and employment assistance, public health, behavioral health, child support, restorative justice, services for older adults and people with disabilities, and services for the military and veterans.
The facility was designed to earn LEED Gold certification and achieve Zero Net Energy. Nearly 50 pieces of artwork by approximately 30 artists graces the inside and outside of the building. A four-level parking structure was also built on the site.
East Otay Mesa Fire Station 38
East Otay Mesa Fire Station 38 opened its doors in October. The facility is located on Alta Road south of Otay Mesa Road near the growing border region and the future addition of the East Otay Mesa Port of Entry.
The 14,000-square-foot building houses a ladder truck, a fire engine, two ambulances and other apparatus. The station also includes four double-depth apparatus bays, 12 bedrooms, a kitchen, a day room, a fitness room and a conference room. The facility achieved a 34% reduction in embodied carbon and was designed to earn LEED Gold certification and achieve Zero Net Energy.
For more information on planned and proposed construction projects, see General Services’ Current Capital Projects list.