BCCA requests Meydenbauer Center upgrades | Council calls $12.5M renovations a modest investment

Bellevue councilmembers voiced approval Monday of financing a $12.5 million renovation of the Meydenbauer Center to include technological upgrades in high demand by its users and modernizing the 20-year-old facility.

Bellevue councilmembers voiced approval Monday of financing a $12.5 million renovation of the Meydenbauer Center to include technological upgrades in high demand by its users and modernizing the 20-year-old facility.

The fact that the center has consistently met its maintenance and operation coverage and the authority board can inject $4 million in reserves into the project alleviated some concerns about the proposal, councilmembers said, which includes the issuance of $8.5 million in tax-exempt bonds.

Rick Carlson, chairman of the Bellevue Convention Center Authority Board, told the council the Meydenbauer Center has generated about $400 million in economic impact since opening in 1993, including $34.7 million and $8 million in state and county tax revenue, respectively.

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Deputy Mayor Kevin Wallace lauded the BCCA’s proposal to use reserves to pay down its principle for the project, adding he is excited about upgrading a city asset that is self-sustaining.Mayor Claudia Balducci said the renovation project cost appears to be a modest proposal, considering the projected growth in revenue through the hotel/motel tax.

BCCA Director John Christison told the council that exterior remediation for the center is estimated to cost $2.7 million, interior improvements are $8.7 million and new structured cabling and network upgrades are $1.1 million. The BCCA is hoping to get direction from the council sometime in the fall.