Illinois Capital Development Board
Selects Design Firm for Construction of $21.1 Million Department of
Juvenile Justice Lincoln Site Project
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[March 17, 2021]
The Illinois Capital Development Board (CDB) has selected Cordogan,
Clark & Assoc., Inc. as the preferred architectural design firm for
the renovation and construction of the Lincoln Developmental Center
in Logan County. CDB will oversee the project’s design and
construction in accordance with the protocol for state-appropriated
projects.
Through Governor Pritzker’s bipartisan capital plan, the first in
nearly a decade, the Department of Juvenile Justice will receive
nearly $21.1M. The administration has released $2.5 million to begin
designing the project which will remodel two cottages for housing
juveniles, plus one cottage for new classrooms and one cottage for
new administrative use. The project will also include designing and
constructing a new multipurpose building, which will include a
gymnasium, classrooms, and office space. The mechanical, electrical,
plumbing, and fire protection (MEP/FP) systems will be upgraded. A
new athletic field, outdoor basketball court, sidewalks, roadway
improvements, and new site security fencing and electronic systems
will be installed.
“Thanks to funding from the Rebuild Illinois bipartisan capital
plan, justice-involved youth will soon enjoy the benefits of a new
residential center as part of DJJ’s 21st Century Illinois
Transformational Model. For too long, juvenile-justice facilities
housed youths in large, warehouse-style facilities, far away from
their friends, families, and communities,” said Governor JB Pritzker.
“I look forward to the completion of these new facilities at Lincoln
that will better serve youth in care and offer supportive services
to help children navigate the hardships of their adolescence.”
“CDB looks forward to working with Cordogan, Clark & Associates
Incorporated and Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice to deliver
the project on time. When completed, Lincoln Developmental Center
will be a model for building youth skills through vocational
training to equip them to be successful in the workforce,” said CDB
Executive Director Jim Underwood.
The new facility is a key element of the 21st Century Illinois
Transformation Model announced by the Pritzker Administration last
year. The new model’s purpose is to reduce the harm of incarceration
by keeping kids close to home and engaged with family and community.
Once completed, youth in the Lincoln facility will receive
restorative and rehabilitative services in developmentally
appropriate, dormitory style residential facilities that are
integrated into the community and closer to their families. The
proposed Illinois Youth Center Lincoln will start the important
shift from IDJJ’s lingering legacy of adult corrections to a more
restorative, rehabilitative, and trauma-informed model that is
designed to foster healthy youth development.
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“IDJJ is grateful to have incredible partners working alongside us to bring the
21st Century Illinois Transformation model to life,” said Heidi Mueller,
Director of the Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice. “While IYC Lincoln is
just one aspect of the transformation, it is a significant step toward a
trauma-informed, close to home IDJJ. With the impressive experience of Cordogan
& Clark, collaboration and guidance from the Capital Development Board, and the
unwavering support from the Pritzker Administration and the Justice, Equity, and
Opportunity Initiative, we are poised to reduce the harm of incarceration for
youth from Central Illinois and invest in the services and supports for Central
Illinois communities that will help these youth grow into healthy, safe and
productive adults.”
“Today’s announcement of an architectural design firm for the new Illinois
Youth Center in Lincoln is an important step in giving those in the juvenile
justice system the opportunity needed for their development. As a former
juvenile probation officer, I know firsthand how difficult it can be for
families to not have a nearby facility to house their loved ones,” said State
Senator Sally Turner (R-Beason). "Converting the former Lincoln Developmental
Center for this purpose should result in more positive outcomes for those housed
in the facility, as well as providing them the education and mentorship needed
in their maturation.
“I appreciate the State of Illinois for this commitment to families of central
Illinois, giving them a facility to house youths in the juvenile justice system.
I have sought to repurpose the former Lincoln Development Center for some time,
and I’m thankful we’re moving forward in such an innovative and cost-effective
way,” said State Representative Tim Butler (R-Springfield).
The historic Rebuild Illinois capital plan passed with bipartisan
super-majorities and will invest $45 billion in roads, bridges, railways,
universities, early childhood centers, and state facilities like the new crime
lab and veterans’ homes, creating and supporting an estimated 540,000 jobs over
the life of the six-year plan and revitalizing local economies across the state.
[Illinois Office of Communication and
Information] |