Nine distinct capital project notices now track the 2013 Dam Monitoring site, creating a dense administrative footprint that stretches from May 2, 2026, all the way to January 1, 2060.
This cluster of filings indicates a sustained period of oversight rather than a single construction event. Residents near the airport data hub can expect ongoing administrative updates as the city manages these critical infrastructure records.
The pattern began on May 2, 2026, when officials filed the first of these notices. Over the following decades, eight additional notices appeared in the system, all dated January 1, 2060. This specific date marks a significant administrative milestone where the majority of the documentation was processed simultaneously. One earlier filing, titled "Eight Capital Project Notices File at Dam Monitoring Site on Single Day," specifically highlighted this burst of activity as a key moment in the site's regulatory history.
Each of the nine records falls under the notices category, yet none provide detailed construction specifications or budget figures. Instead, the abstracts consistently reference "capital projects" and the surrounding "airport data hub" environment. The repeated filing of generic updates suggests a systematic approach to compliance or data management rather than active ground-level construction visible to the public. This administrative density mirrors other recent activity in the area, as seen in reports detailing capital projects activity with nearby airport data hub filings.
The absence of specific project descriptions in these records distinguishes them from typical building permits. While standard construction notices list square footage or contractor details, these entries serve as high-level tracking mechanisms. Similar patterns of non-specific updates have appeared elsewhere in the city's capital project logs, such as in notices noting recent attention amid traffic and crime data hub activity.
City officials will likely continue to file routine administrative updates for this site as the long-term monitoring plan proceeds. Residents should monitor the permit database for any future entries that include specific construction timelines or funding allocations, which would signal a shift from administrative tracking to physical development.