Work begins on high-tech academy in New Orleans

Dec. 20, 2007
School is one of five rebuilt campuses that will open in 2009

A backhoe tore into a crumbling building on the future campus of a new high-tech academy in New Orleans, an early step in a plan to build and renovate five schools that will open in September 2009. The five schools are an attempt to show progress in a city where shuttered buildings still languish after the 2005 flood, and to jump-start a facilities master plan expected to be done in the spring. The master plan will change the landscape of what once was a singular system of about 130 campuses.
Click here to read The New Orleans Times-Picayune article.

EARLIER: About 60 school campuses in New Orleans have been assessed since early fall as officials work to create a master plan for the city's public school facilities. The master plan could drastically change the landscape of the school system, whose enrollment was already declining before Hurricane Katrina, and could also determine the future uses of the about 130 campuses.
Click here to read The New Orleans Times-Picayune article.

Design teams have unveiled preliminary plans to build and renovate several new public schools in New Orleans. Recovery School District officials hope to break ground on the three new schools and two renovated buildings by the end of the year, the first wave of construction before the completion of a larger master plan sometime in 2008.
Click here to read The New Orleans Times-Picayune article.

Louisiana education officials have established criteria for determining where contractors will start renovating or reconstructing five new schools in New Orleans. The work is expected to be completed by the 2009-10 school year. Officials have said most, if not all, of the projects will be new construction rather than renovations.
Click here to read The New Orleans Times-Picayune article.

Chasing an ambitious timeline, Louisiana Superintendent of Education Paul Pastorek announced a plan Wednesday to renovate or break ground on five new buildings in New Orleans by the end of the year. Plans call for one school in each of the city's five council districts. Most of the work will probably be new construction, rather than renovations, and will be completed by the 2009-10 school year.
Click here to read The New Orleans Times-Picayune article.

Sponsored Recommendations

How to design flexible learning spaces that teachers love and use

Unlock the potential of flexible learning spaces with expert guidance from school districts and educational furniture providers. Discover how to seamlessly integrate adaptive ...

Blurring the Lines in Education Design: K–12 to Higher Ed to Corporate America

Discover the seamless integration of educational and corporate design principles, shaping tomorrow's leaders from kindergarten to boardroom. Explore innovative classroom layouts...

Room to Learn: Furniture Solutions for Education

Preparing students for the future. Utilizing our experience in the education market, we offer a dynamic selection of products that pair technology with furniture to help stimulate...

Transforming Education: A Case Study in Progressive Classroom Design

Discover how Workspace Interiors and the Baldwin School District reshaped learning environments in Long Island, New York, creating pedagogically responsive spaces that foster ...