HERAT PROVICE, Afghanistan — A large building project managed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Afghanistan Engineer District-South will be crossing the finish line before the end of the summer, according to the two USACE employees overseeing the work.
Work on the $13.7-million 9th Commando compound, located in the outskirts of Herat City, will become the home for a battalion-size element, or kandak, of the Afghan National Army Special Forces later this month said Jackson VanPelt, the project engineer.
"We should be ready to turn it over to the Afghan National Army very soon," he said. "The contractors are wrapping up some finishing work and we'll conduct our final inspection soon."
VanPelt said remaining work at the site includes touch-up painting, finishing concrete roadways, sports fields, perimeter walls and anti-vehicle ditches, installing windows and interior hardware on several the site's 55 buildings and installing stoves and other appliances in the dining facility.
A formal final inspection will take place later this month and a "punch list" of last-minute and fix-up tasks will be given to the prime contractors. A formal ribbon-cutting ceremony, to officially mark the project's turn over to the Afghan Army, will take place later this summer when all the punch list items are checked off as completed.
Members of the South District's Operations and Maintenance Division will team up with Afghan maintenance crews to decide the best plan for use and maintenance of the site's buildings, generators and other equipment, VanPelt said.
"These guys will be set up pretty well," he said. "They will be completely self-sufficient."
The compound boasts two wells, its own power generators, bunkers, dining and storage facilities, recreation areas, parade field, entry control points, roadways, medical clinics and security systems, he said. Only the waste water will be piped to nearby Camp Zafar for treatment.
In addition to the main battalion area, USACE engineers supervised the construction of several buildings on an adjacent compound used by U.S. Special Operations Command "mentors," VanPelt said.