Holts Summit city employees move to new City Hall building next door

Holts Summit City Administrator Brian Crane arranges chairs around a conference table on the lower level of a meeting room at the new Holts Summit City Hall building at 213 S. Summit Drive. Crane said the Board of Aldermen will tour the facility Monday to determine if they want to hold board meetings in the new facility.
Holts Summit City Administrator Brian Crane arranges chairs around a conference table on the lower level of a meeting room at the new Holts Summit City Hall building at 213 S. Summit Drive. Crane said the Board of Aldermen will tour the facility Monday to determine if they want to hold board meetings in the new facility.

Holts Summit city officials are spending this week settling into spaces provided in a new City Hall building at 213 S. Summit Drive, just north of the previous City Hall at 245 S. Summit Drive.

Moving to the Holts Summit City Hall was completed during the weekend. City offices were closed Friday to start the move.

The change to another building for City Hall got its start from a need to expand space occupied now by the Holts Summit Police Department.

Holts Summit City Administrator Brian Crane said rather than constructing a new building for the Police Department, the city decided to buy a nearby former bank building and convert it to the new City Hall.

"That was much less expensive for the city," Crane said.

The change also will allow the Holts Summit Police Department, which now occupies the lower basement level of City Hall, to occupy the entire building and receive the extra space it needs.

More space also is needed for the Holts Summit Municipal Court. During sessions handling traffic tickets and other offenses, the room often is not large enough to accommodate the number of people waiting for court sessions.

Crane said this week an architect will meet with city representatives to discuss a plan to renovate the top floor the storm shelter building immediately south of City Hall into a combination court chambers for the Holts Summit Municipal Court and a meeting room for the Holts Summit Board of Aldermen.

When the city's storm shelter building was constructed a few years ago, the top level was completed but it the interior was left unfinished.

Since the building already has walls and a roof, Crane said, the project won't be as expensive because it will involve only finishing the interior.

On Monday night, Crane said members of the Board of Aldermen will tour the new City Hall Building at 213 S. Summit Drive and check out a meeting room on the lower level of the structure.

Members of the board will determine if they want to use this room as a regular public meeting room for the Board of Aldermen or continue using current chambers while a new combination Alderman chambers and courtroom is constructed on the upper level of the storm shelter building.

The room in the new building already has a large conference table and chairs along with numerous chairs to seat the public.

Crane said the new two-level building to serve as City Hall was acquired through a lease-purchase agreement. The seller of the 5,000-square-foot property was Kenneth Berkel of Berkel and Berkel LLC of Holts Summit.

The building at 213 S. Summit Drive cost the city $310,000. The city paid half of the cost of the building and financed the remaining amount through Missouri Public Utility Alliance at an annual percentage rate of about 3 percent. The group is using Greyhawk Commercial Finance LLC to finance the structure.

Crane said the $310,000 city hall building would cost about $1 million if constructed as a new building.

To help the tornado-stricken people of Dumas and surroundings, donations can be made to the Delta Area Disaster Relief Fund, care of the Delta Area Community Foundation, P.O. Box 894, Dumas, AR, 71639, or through the Arkansas Community Foundation, 700 S. Rock St., Little Rock, AR, 72202.