Seacliff Elementary opens as Huntington Beach’s first new school in
- Share via
25 years
-- ANDREW WAINER
Huntington Beach’s first new school in a quarter of a century opened in
the fall -- the state-of-the-art Huntington Seacliff Elementary School.
The new educational facility was a long time coming. Proposed 10 years
ago, it was beset with delays, design changes and developer negotiations.
In 1992, the school board decided to build a two-story campus on an
8.3-acre lot at the corner of Garfield Avenue and Saddleback Lane.
Because of a recession in the mid-1990s the project had to be scaled
back. The original two-story model was scrapped in January 1998, when it
was deemed too expensive. Construction finally began later that year, in
October.
The new 64,167-square-foot school was prewired to support technology. It
was also the first school in California to be constructed according to
1999 building codes. The school was designed to blend with the style of
the surrounding neighborhood, painted in soft earth tones, with
California Mission-style terra cotta tile on the roofs.
When the design for the school was finished, another problem arose for
the district: Who would get to attend the new school.
Dozens of residents complained when their neighborhoods were excluded
from the preliminary boundary plans. Bolsa Landmark, The Bluffs, Edwards
Hill and Hamptons, Seagate Peninsula, Ocean Colony, Seacliff Estates,
Seacliff on the Greens, and Upper and Lower Seacliff eventually were the
neighborhoods included within the school’s enrollment borders.
Enrollment at the school is about 450 students.
Once it opened, the school ran like clockwork.
And to celebrate the opening, the PTA had a “10,000 Leagues Under the
Seacliff” dance in the fall, which was well attended by parents, students
and administrators.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.