Many Getting A Slice Of
Adriaen's Pie
Small businesses win more than one in three contracts
By Anthony Cronin, New London Day
Published on 11/12/2004
Hartford –– More than a third of the contracts awarded for the
Connecticut Convention Center being built here have gone to
small businesses, including minority and female-owned firms,
convention officials said Thursday.
The convention center, which is being developed by the
Waterford Group and will be managed by its Waterford
Management subsidiary, has awarded about $171 million in
contracts so far, and nearly 35 percent of that amount, or
$59.2 million, has gone to small business firms, said Katie
Blint, the center's communications director.
Of that amount, $45.1 million has been awarded to minority and
women-owned firms, she said. Contracts for the small business
work include fire protection equipment, iron and steel
work, glass installation and a variety of plumbing, heating and
air conditioning supplies.
The $230 million convention center, which is under
construction, is part of the $771 million Adriaen's Landing
project in downtown Hartford that will include a Marriott highrise
hotel, residential and entertainment complexes and a
science and exploration center. The Waterford Group, headed
by Waterford-based developer Len Wolman, is serving as the project's master developer.
Once completed, the 409-room Marriott Downtown Hartford hotel will be owned by the Waterford Group and
managed by its Waterford Hotel Group subsidiary.
The 540,000-square-foot convention center, which features a 10-story atrium, will be the largest convention space
between New York and Boston. Both the convention center and the 22-story hotel are expected to open next
summer. Construction has not yet started on the science center and the residential and entertainment portions of
the project.
Adriaen's Landing is named for Adriaen Block, the Dutch navigator who discovered the Connecticut River. The
project, which began in 2000, sits on the eastern edge of Hartford's high-rise downtown, next to Interstate 91 and
overlooking the Connecticut River.
Meg Yetishefsky, director of the small and minority business program for the state's Department of Administrative
Services, welcomed the strong showing by both minority-owned and small business firms working on the project.
State officials have said that improving the state's economy through small-business development is a major part of
the state's ongoing Small Business Initiative.
“The project is a good example of how the integration of small (and) minority businesses can be successfully
achieved,” said Yetishefsky. “The convention center is doing a great job,” she said.
Connecticut officials have mandated that 25 percent of contracts awarded on state projects must go to small
business as well as minority- and women-owned firms. A majority of the financing for the massive Adriaen's Landing
downtown revitalization project is from state funds.
In addition to the awarding of contracts to small businesses and minority-owned businesses, convention center
officials said that more than $11 million in contracts have been awarded to Hartford-based small businesses.
Patrick Delany, who is a purchasing agent for the Hunt-Gilbane construction firms that are the joint contractors on
the project, said both construction firms recognize that small and minority-owned businesses are an integral part of
such construction projects. “The (state's) set-aside program (for such contractors) really helps to identify and reach
out to those businesses,” he said.