Treading lightly at oldest high school
Christine Carrillo
With Measure A construction underway at various school sites, each of
them experiencing an influx of portable housing within the school
district, questions for officials are centering on construction at
the oldest school, Newport Harbor High School.
Still receiving inquiries about the future of the high school’s
nearly 75-year-old tower and overall facade of Robins Hall/Loats
Theater, district staff members are working to ease community fears
by updating residents on the goings on at Newport Harbor.
“There’s going to be a lot happening at Newport Harbor High School
over the next four to five years,” said Paul Reed, assistant
superintendent of business services for the district. “We’re on
course ... and we will get to the end of this; we will make it better
than before.”
Newport Harbor High will be among the first two high schools --
Costa Mesa High School being the other -- within the district to
undergo Measure A construction. Newport Harbor is expected to begin
its Measure A construction early next year.
While nearly every site within the district is anxious for
construction to begin, the Newport Harbor High community is more
concerned with the historic and aesthetic nature of its buildings.
Their concerns have not gone unnoticed.
“We’ve been working hard this year and we will continue to work
hard,” said David Peterson, assistant principal at Newport Harbor who
oversees the school’s facilities and attends all of the site
committee meetings. “We want to ensure the history and the tradition
and the legacy of Newport Harbor. [The school] is like the central
point in the community. We’ve got a tremendous amount of public
support and a tremendous amount of public concern. We appreciate the
support and will address the concern in the best way possible.”
Robins Hall/Loats Theater buildings, which have posed the most
concern, don’t fall under the Measure A plan. After a structural
engineering study was conducted on the school’s buildings, most of
which were built in 1928, the results showed that they presented an
unacceptable risk if Newport Beach suffered a large “magnitude
seismic event.”
As a result, the board of trustees voted to move ahead with plans
for a new building.
The board looked at two options -- one, to conduct a partial
deconstruction, seismic augmentation and reconstruction that would
cost anywhere from $20 million to $30 million and, two, to build a
new structure reminiscent of the existing architecture that
incorporates the existing tower and theater facade. The board voted
for the second proposal, which saves the tower and would cost the
district from $18 million to $23 million.
To meet the financial demands of such a project, school officials
will combine allocations from the state as part of Measure A with
funds it should receive based on the safety concerns the school
facilities present.
“This is a district project that has yet to be funded and the
school board is in the driver’s seat,” Reed said.
Still awaiting funding, construction for that plan may not be
completed for another four to five years, Reed said. Until then, the
students and administrators will be relocated into a group of
portables that are now being erected.
Another major renovation at the high school already underway is
the swimming pool. The pool, similar to Robins Hall/Loats Theater,
presented immediate health and safety concerns. Due to its
deteriorating condition, the school board recognized the need to
address those concerns by voting to move forward with immediate
repairs rather than permanently shutting down the facility until
Measure A got around to it.
Repairs to the pool fall under priority six of Measure A, and
Measure A construction at the school sites is only expected to go
through the priority four level.
Staff still seeks other sources for funding, since the first half
of the two-phase pool project will cost the district about $628,000
instead of the previous estimate of $400,000.
“The pool is used by hundreds and hundreds of kids, as well as
people in the community,” Robert Barbot, the district’s
superintendent, said during a school board meeting in March. “When we
look at the other priorities, we think this is justified.”
The board agreed and, at the March 11 board meeting, voted to move
ahead with repairs.
The pool is used by students at Newport Harbor, as well as the
city of Newport Beach and a few other community organizations. The
repairs to the pool are expected to be completed near Labor Day, well
before the school will receive funds for construction on Robins
Hall/Loats Theater.
The school holds site committee meetings, which are open to the
public, every other Monday. The next meeting will be held at 7 a.m.
on July 14 in Heritage Hall.
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