Request for Proposal - Construction Management Services for Centre Block

Solicitation number EP748-151886/E

Publication date

Closing date and time 2016/11/21 14:00 EST


    Description
    Trade Agreement: WTO-AGP/NAFTA/AIT/Canada FTAs with Peru/Colombia/Panama
    Tendering Procedures: Suppliers on permanent list or able to meet qualification requirements
    Competitive Procurement Strategy: 
    Comprehensive Land Claim Agreement: No
    Nature of Requirements: 
    
    NOTICE OF PROPOSED PROCUREMENT
    
    This notice of proposed procurement is to inform suppliers that Public Works and Government Services Canada is proceeding with the second phase of a two-phase selection process. Phase 1 consisted of a Request for Qualification, which resulted in the selection of the highest-ranked Proponent as identified in EP748-151886/D. Phase 2 will consist of a Request for Proposal and will only be open to the qualified Proponent. 
    
    PROJECT IDENTIFICATION
    Project Number: R.011816.250
    Request for Proposal
    Construction Management Services  
    Centre Block Rehabilitation Project
    Centre Block, Parliament Hill, Ottawa, Ontario
    
    Purpose:
    Public Works and Government Services Canada (PWGSC) is completing a process to select a successful Proponent for the provision of construction management services for the Centre Block Rehabilitation project located at 111 Wellington Street, Ottawa, Ontario.
    
    A Request for Qualification (RFQ) was initiated which defined the requirements for the prequalification of Respondents for this project. Only one Proponent identified in EP748-151886/D is invited to submit a Proposal for this project as part of the Request for Proposal (RFP) phase of the solicitation.  Canada will take all steps necessary to ensure the procurement process is open, fair and honest.
    
    Only the following Proponent is invited to participate in this RFP process: PCL/ED, a Joint Venture
    
    The construction management services are required from contract award, expected to bein winter 2017, for duration of eight to twelve years depending on the options approved for implementation.  Active construction is anticipated to start in 2018 once the building has been vacated. 
    
    In order to provide guidance as to the degree of undertaking and complexity, the scope of work may include but is not limited to the following elements, to the extent possible given the building's heritage designation:
    
    • restoration of the building envelope, including selective
    security mitigation measures;
    • seismic upgrade;
    • excavation of the basement subject to viability and cost
    benefit;
    • new mechanical, electrical, and vertical transportation
    systems;
    • new information technology, multimedia and security systems;
    • parliamentary office suites and broadcast capable committee
    rooms;
    • adjustment to allow additional seating to the Senate Chamber
    and the House of Commons Chamber;
    • complete fit-up of the building, including special purpose
    space;
    • restoration of designated heritage spaces;
    • specialized art handling for the removal, storage and return
    of heritage assets and the main collection of the Library of
    Parliament;
    • conservation of fixed and moveable heritage assets; and
    • significant conservation of exterior and interior masonry,
    wood, plaster, paint, art glass, fabric and metals.
    
    Project Background:
    The Centre Block is the core component within the Parliament Hill complex, occupying a central position between the East Block, the West Block, the Library of Parliament and the emerging Visitor Welcome Centre.  The Gothic Revival style of the original mid-19th Century building was specifically chosen to allow a rich and complex relationship between the wilderness escarpment to the north and the great lawn to the south.  In its rebuilding after the disastrous 1916 fire, the exterior style was maintained and a new Beaux-Arts interior created to update the building and allow an increased public presence.  It displays a multitude of stone carvings, including gargoyles, grotesques and friezes in keeping with the Victorian High Gothic style.  
    
    The building is connected with the Peace Tower, built between 1919 and 1927, and the Library of Parliament.  It houses the Senate and House of Commons Chambers and offices of numerous Senators, Members of Parliament and senior administration or both legislative houses, as well as many ceremonial spaces such as the Hall of Honour, the Memorial Chamber and Confederation Hall.
    
    Major renovations were first proposed in the 1960's. At that time the original mechanical and electrical systems were already more than 40 years old. Nothing was done for another nine years when a basement fire prompted improvements to the life safety systems.  In the mid-1970s, a complete rehabilitation was proposed but was postponed; however emergency exiting from the Peace Tower was improved.  By 1998, the Centre Block Underground Services had been constructed. This facility included underground electrical switchgear, transformers, emergency power generation and centralized Information Technology facilities as well as storage and support space for the House of Commons.  It also provided limited improvements to House of Commons material handling capability.
    
    Since 1999, only emergency repairs andregular maintenance have been undertaken to allow continued occupancy of the building. The last significant rehabilitation was the repair to the Peace Tower and south façade, completed in the late 1990s.  Repairs to the building such as the courtyard parapets and some of the penthouses have been completed and other similar interventions are ongoing.
    
    The Centre Block, including the Peace Tower, requires significant rehabilitation in the very near-term as many of its major systems and components will be at risk of critical failure by 2019, with total failure predicted by 2025.  Due to the interdependencies of the Centre Block building systems, it must be decommissioned at one time and emptied before any invasive work can begin.  A challenging aspect of this project's scope will be to integrate the Visitor Welcome Centre Complex, aligning the Long Term Vision and Plan's direction for a connecting concourse spine for pedestrian movement and independent but connected material handling facilities. 
    
    
    Delivery Date: Above-mentioned
    
    The Crown retains the right to negotiate with suppliers on any procurement.
    
    Documents may be submitted in either official language of Canada.

    Contract duration

    Refer to the description above for full details.

    Trade agreements

    • World Trade Organization Agreement on Government Procurement (WTO GPA)
    • Canada-Panama Free Trade Agreement
    • Agreement on Internal Trade (AIT)
    • Canada-Colombia Free Trade Agreement
    • Canada-Peru Free Trade Agreement (CPFTA)
    • North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)

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    Contact information

    Contracting organization

    Organization
    Public Works and Government Services Canada
    Address
    11 Laurier St, Phase III, Place du Portage
    Gatineau, Quebec, K1A 0S5
    Canada
    Contracting authority
    Metaxas, Nick
    Phone
    (819) 775-5571 ( )
    Address
    185 Sparks Street, 3rd floor
    Ottawa, Ontario, K1A 0S5

    Buying organization(s)

    Organization
    Public Works and Government Services Canada
    Address
    11 Laurier St, Phase III, Place du Portage
    Gatineau, Quebec, K1A 0S5
    Canada
    Bidding details

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    Summary information

    Notice type
    Request for Proposal
    Language(s)
    English, French
    Region(s) of delivery
    National Capital Region (NCR)
    Procurement method
    Competitive – Selective Tendering

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