Demolition instead of renovation at Ensign?
Danette Goulet
NEWPORT-MESA -- It may be easier to demolish Ensign Intermediate School
and start from scratch rather than merely repair the existing facility,
district officials said.
Ensign is part of the district’s effort to identify and come up with
plans to upgrade its crumbling schools. An architect’s report released
earlier this year showed a need for $127 million in school improvements,
including $3.8 million to renovate Ensign.
After revisiting nearly all of the schools and checking every nook and
cranny, Mike Fine, assistant superintendent for financial services, told
school board members that “the facility in the worst condition is Ensign,
by far.”
When it comes down to the bottom line, the $3.8 million estimated for
Ensign’s renovation was much too low, he said.
Fine asked architects to come back with the cost of building a new
campus, saying that after what he saw, he felt the price tag would be
comparable.
The notion that it may be more cost-effective to tear down Ensign did not
come as a surprise to several school board members.
“I’m very much aware of the need at Ensign,” said school board member
Judith Franco, who is also a PTA board member at the school. “People
should go take a tour of the stairwells that are blocked off because the
walls are crumbling and unsafe -- or the whole crumbling wall in the
library that leaks.”
Built 50 years ago, Ensign is not the oldest school in the district, but
it may be the most poorly designed.
What was discovered, said school board member Martha Fluor, was the
configuration of the school has made any expansion nearly impossible.
“They have 11,000 or 12,000 students -- the same as three of our high
schools -- and they have only one gym. The high schools all have two,”
Fluor said.
Officials haven’t even started to figure out what they would do with all
of those students if they decided to tear down and rebuild the school.
But Franco said demolishing the school just may be the best decision.
“I think it all hinges on cost analysis,” she said. “If it is close, it
would make more sense to design a school for the year 2000 and beyond.”
Supt. Robert Barbot agreed, saying the decision on Ensign’s future will
be based on what is best for the students, as well as cost-effectiveness.
After the initial surprise wore off, board members raised the question of
whether there were any other schools that might need to be rebuilt.
Many other facilities, including Whittier Elementary School, have
components that need to be replaced. But most are leased portable
classrooms, Fine said.
The only exception is Monte Vista School, which currently houses Back Bay
High School for independent studies and continuing education. If the
district chooses to reopen Monte Vista as an elementary school, the
building’s condition does justify being rebuilt, Fine said.
If that happens, officials said they would rebuild on the other side of
campus, keeping Monte Vista open during construction, Fine said.
Fine said as he and his team scoured the schools, they found more
problems that needed to be addressed than were included in the
architect’s original report.
“We are identifying more things in detail on repeat visits and know that
some money amounts will change,” Fine said.
However, he said he is unsure how much the total cost may vary from the
estimated $127 million.
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