West side flood project moving forward

The old Sears building on State Street is slated for demolition.

The old Sears warehouse on the Menomonee River — the site of scratch and dent sales for a generation — will be torn down soon if the Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewerage District Commission approves a razing contract this month. 

“The view on State Street will change dramatically,” said MMSD spokesman Bill Graffin.

The commission’s Operations Committee will consider a proposal Monday to tear down the Sears building, 5901 W. State St., and the former Ashland property, 1029 R N. Hawley Rd., for $248,000. The recommended contractor is Walters Wrecking, of Brookfield.

“It’s no longer in use,” Ald. Michael Murphy said of the Sears building. “It’s in the floodplain now.”

Removing the building, which is part of MMSD’s western Milwaukee flood management plan, will make the land available for passive recreational use and flood storage and will improve the environment, he said.

The western Milwaukee plan ”will include the daylighting of Schoonmacher Creek under the former Sears building and the lowering of the former Central Ready-Mixed site” east of the Sears site, according to MMSD documents.

The demolition, if approved, is expected to take about three months and be completed in December.

The Operations Committee also will consider a $7 million contract with the Canadian – Pacific Railroad to build a temporary railroad bridge and additional box culverts at the site of the County Grounds detention basin project.

“The temporary bridge consists of two 85-foot long single spans on both the westbound and eastbound tracks,” according to MMSD documents. “A 145-foot long sheet pile wall between the tracks will allow the continual operation of trains during construction of Phase 2 of the District’s project.”

A quick trip out to the detention ponds Saturday showed that washouts are still a problem at the site, although some repairs have been made. Birds, however, have made use of the washed out area by moving into the vertical walls created by the washout.

Small birds -- perhaps some sort of swallow -- have made themselves at home in the vertical walls created by the washouts at the County Grounds stormwater detention ponds.
Where the birds are.

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