This comprehensive district-wide renovation and expansion touched every campus in the Yuma School District, including its pre-K to 8th grade school, high school, administrative offices and bus barn, modernizing the facilities and enhancing both safety and security.
Delivering this large 252,170-sq-ft middle school—a building with three academic wings that surrounds a central area of lab space— took careful planning and risk mitigation efforts.
Originally constructed in 1912, the Bristol County Agricultural High School campus lacked sufficient facilities to meet the school district’s current mission—to expand its programs and grow enrollment to 600 students.
As a replacement for two existing elementary schools with 90-year-old infrastructure, this new facility will tie two communities together while modernizing the learning environment.
Among the first projects of its kind to be built on Native American reservation lands, the $18-million Against the Current Career Academy enables students at Umonhon Nation Public Schools to learn hands-on jobs while attending high school.
Constructing a 21st-century elementary school while honoring a beloved historic legacy is no small task, but the Bethel-Hanberry Elementary School blends the new with the old in a striking building ready to carry students through the next century.
The new Bush Upper School is a three-story, 20,000-sq-ft, ultra-efficient facility nestled amongst cedar trees in an environmentally critical steep slope zone.
Owned by Denver Public Schools, the 28,000-sq-ft commercial greenhouse is the first facility of its kind dedicated to providing public school students with fresh produce.
Funding from a successful education construction referendum came just in time to address aging facilities such as the 80-year-old Skyline Vista Elementary School, which had far outlived its usefulness.