Historic  1870-era  jail  upgrade  one  of  many  valencia  county  projects  receiving  capital  outlay  funding

A project that will see the upgrading of a historic jail in the central New Mexico town of Tome has now been approved for $100,000 in state funding.

The Tome jail dates to the mid-1870s when the town served as the seat of Valencia County. It makes up the last structural remains of a larger building that was once the Valencia County Courthouse.

Made of stone walls, the former 375 square foot jail with a 12-foot high ceiling made of hand-hewn vigas, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places    

The project is just one of more than $9.6 million in capital outlay projects for Valencia County approved by Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham.

One of the largest appropriations is seeing $860,000 for sewer line improvements along the W. Aragon Road in Belen, with a slightly smaller $859,000 for the construction of a second clarifier for the Village of Bosque Farms’ wastewater treatment system. That money will also upgrade the plant’s ultraviolet system.

The town of Peralta has been approved for up to $550,000 for drain and flood construction work, with $300,000 targeting the construction of a City Hall complex in the City of Rio Communities.

Exactly $400,000 will go for improvements to the Village of Los Lunas Sports Complex.

​By Garry Boular

No Responses

Your comment will be posted after it is approved.

Leave a Reply

Get stories like these right to your inbox. ​Sign up for our newsletter
Archives
Construction Reporter

Show Password Forgot Password?