City issues $31 million permit for JEA headquarters construction

Ryan Companies US Inc. broke ground on the nearly $68 million project on Pearl Street Downtown in October.


An artist's rendering of  the JEA headquarters under construction at 225 N. Pearl St. Downtown.
An artist's rendering of the JEA headquarters under construction at 225 N. Pearl St. Downtown.
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The city issued a $31.09 million building permit May 13 for the ongoing construction of JEA’s next Downtown headquarters. 

Minneapolis-based Ryan Companies US Inc. owns the 1.54-acre site at 225 N. Pearl St. Downtown. JEA will lease the property.

Kimley-Horn and Associates Inc. is the civil engineer. Ryan A+E Inc. is the architect and interior designer.

A $14.35 million construction permit for the eight-level, 656-spot parking garage is in city review, according to Building Inspection Division records.

The city issued two foundation permits for the project March 22 — one for the office building and another for the garage at $2 million each.

Ryan broke ground on the project Oct. 22 after beginning site work in August.

In June, the Downtown Development Review Board approved a scaled-down, lower-cost design for the JEA’s new headquarters that will replace its building at 21 W. Church St.

The municipal electric and water utility is considering other real estate acquisitions related to operations. 

JEA paid almost $2.45 million for a 2.27-acre property in LaVilla purchased from LaVilla Partners III LLLP in March for a possible secondary headquarters designed to survive a natural disaster such as a major hurricane.

In January, JEA said it would pause plans to build the facility as its management and board reevaluated space needs in the utility’s post-pandemic workplace.

The proposed 40,000-square-foot facility would house JEA’s emergency operations center and supplement the utility’s eight-story, $64 million to $68 million headquarters. 

CEO Jay Stowe said March 23 that a long-term hybrid work format for JEA employees would change the interior design of the primary headquarters and reduce its space needs at the hardened facility.

Editor Karen Brune Mathis contributed to this report. 

 

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