HPreserving Georgia's ISTORIC SCHOOLS Historic Preservation Division, Georgia Department of Natural Resources
The Legacy of Historic Schools
S chools play an important role in our lives. During a large part of our formative years, schools are where we make lifelong friends, learn to read and write, develop skills and learn lessons in sports, music, and other extracurricular activities, join clubs, attend football games and dances, and court boyfriends and girlfriends. School is often the place where we decide what we want to be when we "grow up," and decisions made there determine who we will become as well as what we will do. Memories of our school years are significant, and preserving the buildings associated with those memories can provide important anchors for individuals and the community.
Historic schools link generations within a community. Schools are also local landmark buildings--like county courthouses, city halls, and libraries--which are monumental in architecture and rich in associative memories. W. Ray Luce
Communities in Georgia are growing rapidly, and there is a need for new
schools to serve our growing population. However, many of our important
historic school buildings, along with newly constructed facilities, can be used to
educate additional generations of Georgia's students. ose wishing to abandon
historic schools often
cite safety, technology,
and code issues; howev-
er, many of these build-
ings can be rehabilitated
to meet current safety
codes and modern-
day educational needs
and regulations. Old
schools can be wired for
today's computer and
The recently rehabilitated Academy of Richmond County (circa technology-based cur1925) continues to serve its community as a public high riculum. Updates and
school.
modernizations can be
recommended and accomplished by experienced architects familiar with historic
preservation methods. Rehabilitation can often be completed more cheaply than
new construction.
Saving historic schools is not only a historic preservation issue -- it is also a
neighborhood, environmental, land use and community planning issue. Historic
schools support neighborhood stability. Students are often able to walk or ride
their bikes to school. eir grounds may provide recreational opportunities for
nearby residents. Historic schools are vital elements in established neighborhoods.
In Georgia, when we abandon our historic school buildings to build new
facilities, often on the outskirts of communities on previously undeveloped
farmland, we create a myriad of additional problems. Children must be trans-
ported to and from school each day by bus or car; thus decreasing neighborhood
cohesiveness and increasing traffic congestion, transportation time, and expenses
What's inside...
Utilizing Historic
3
Schools Continuing to use Georgia's historic schools as schools
5
Case Study The successful rehabilitation of Savannah's historic Charles Ellis Montessori School
6
Rehab or Build New? The pros and cons of new buildings versus rehabilitating historic school buildings
8
Deferred Maintenance The #1 problem facing historic school buildings
9
Adaptive Use A new life for vacant school buildings
11 Rosenwald Schools Documenting and preserving Georgia's historic Rosenwald Schools
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Historic Rural Schools Initiative Documentation and revitalization of vacant historic school buildings
H Preserving Georgia's istoric Schools
Principle Editor and Author Cherie Bennett
Assistant Editors Mary Ann Eaddy Helen Talley-McRae
Layout and Design Jennifer Evans Yankopolus
Photography James R. Lockhart
Special Thanks to: Karen Anderson-Cordova Jeanne Cyriaque Kenneth Gibbs Carole Griffith William Hover Jennifer M. Lewis Andrea MacDonald, South GA RDC Steven Moffson Kenneth H. Thomas Jr. Christine Van Voorhies Pat Counts, GA Dept. of Education Glen Bennett, The Georgia Trust National Trust for Historic
Preservation
Lonice C. Barrett, Commissioner, Dept. of Natural Resources
W. Ray Luce, Director, HPD
2003 Historic Preservation Division,
Georgia Department of Natural Resources
156 Trinity Avenue, SW, Ste 101 Atlanta, GA 30303-3600 404-656-2840 www.gashpo.org
This publication has been financed in part with federal funds from the National Park Service, Department of the Interior, through the Historic Preservation Division, Georgia Department of Natural Resources. The contents and opinions do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of the Department of the Interior, nor does the mention of trade names, commercial products or consultants constitute endorsement or recommendation by the Department of the Interior or the Georgia Department of Natural Resources. The Department of the Interior prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, national origin, or disability in its federally assisted programs. If you believe you have been discriminated against in any program, activity, or facility, or if you desire more information, write to: Office for Equal Opportunity, National Park Service, 1849 C Street, Washington, D.C. 20240.
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(expenses often not included in looking at the cost of new schools versus old). In addition, farmland and forests are destroyed, and new infrastructure must be built. By rehabilitating and continuing to use historic buildings, we are also recycling existing resources rather than dumping tons of debris from a demolished school into a landfill.
Sprawling new campuses of buildings with a few small windows have become the norm (BELOW RIGHT); however, new research finds that smaller schools are better learning environments for children. Adding windows to windowless school buildings is becoming an important new trend in school design. Smaller, more open schools have been shown to be an important factor in improving students' test scores, and historic schools already meet these physical criteria.
Many of Georgia's historic schools are fine works of architecture and craftsmanship. On the other hand, new generic school buildings with less architectural merit seem to be proliferating around the state on the outskirts of communities.
As illustrated in these photographs of the auditorium (BELOW LEFT) and front entryway (PAGE ) of the recently rehabilitated historic Academy of Richmond County, a public high school in Augusta built in 1925, "it is easy to paint walls, fix ceilings, add new lighting --
essentially making old spaces look new. However, it is the not-so-obvious opportunities that result from strategic decisions to preserve, enhance and transform, which provide the greatest benefits of renovation...[R]enovation often can result in dramatic, inspiring spaces that might not be economically feasible in new construction." (A Community Guide to Saving Older Schools). It is typically cost prohibitive today to build new schools that include the level of architectural design, materials, and quality represented in our historic schools. As communities in Georgia and their local boards of education decide whether to rehabilitate an existing historic school or build a new one, we at the state's historic preservation office believe that both options should be carefully considered. Many times new is not the best; old schools can be updated to provide a quality educational experience for Georgia's students and teachers. is publication addresses the issues involved in using historic schools for educational purposes through case studies, reference materials, and an overview of efforts to document and preserve Georgia's historic schools. While not all of our historic schools can continue to be used for their original purpose, they often can serve their communities through adaptive use. is publication examines possible alternative uses for school buildings already abandoned around the state. Also highlighted are actual projects in which schools have been successfully converted into cultural centers, police headquarters, administrative office space, museums, residences, and for other public and private functions. n
Historic Preservation Division
Utilizing Georgia's Historic Schools as Schools
In , the annual report of the Georgia Department of Education boasted a total of , schools. Today, there are approximately , in the state. Any existing schools
cost of new construction to replace the historic landmark or the actual cost of such renovation and modernization." Currently, the state allows $ a square foot for new
dating from or earlier are potentially eligible for the construction of an elementary school, $ a square foot for
National Register of Historic Places. A structure must be middle schools and $ a square foot for high schools. If by
at least years old and look much as it did when it was chance the rehabilitation costs exceed these amounts, the
constructed to be considered his-
local school board is responsible
toric and listed in the National Register. Many educational facilities in use today are in buildings that are considered historic.
According to the U.S. Bureau of the Census, Georgia's population will increase by . million people in the next twenty years, which is equivalent to an
"Well-designed, well-built schools, with something of artistic grace and beauty manifest in structure and grounds, will have an influence for good, not only upon pupils, but upon the entire community. Preventable ugliness is a sin, especially when it is forced upon children in the formative years of their lives...Let us make the school what it should be -- the most attractive place in the community."
for making up the difference. In order for a school to
actually receive Capital Outlay Program funding, the school's rehabilitation must be a top priority within the school board's Local Facilities Plan. Every school system must create a long-range Local Facilities Plan
increase of , additional Georgians each year. Rising population numbers will inevitably
-- M. L. Brittain, State School Superintendent, School Architecture: Georgia (Georgia's Department of Education, 1911)
at least once every five years. is plan identifies all the needs for new and existing schools
lead to increased enrollment in
within that school system and
schools, with the consequent increased need for additional the estimated funds needed for new construction, as well as
school buildings. However, existing historic school build- modifications to existing school buildings. e local school
ings should also be used to meet the growing need for edu- system then must prioritize each identified need.
cational facilities.
Each year, local school systems earn entitlement to state
e rehabilitation of an existing school may be funded dollars for capital projects based on those needs identified in
through the Georgia Department of Education's Capital their Local Facilities Plan. [Entitlement funds are earned by
Outlay Program. With the passage of House Bill , the calculating the local system's needs relative to the total needs
"A Plus Education Reform Act of ," Chapter of Title of all Georgia school systems.] Each year every school sys-
of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated was amended tem must decide whether to submit an application request-
relating to elementary, secondary and adult education. HB ing state funding for the construction projects that are
amended existing State Board of Education policies to
allow the use of Capital Outlay Program funds in rehabili-
tating those schools that are considered "registered historic
landmarks." Facilities are considered "registered historic
landmarks" when they are listed in the National Register
of Historic Places or the Georgia Register of Historic Places
or when they are certified by the state historic preservation
officer as eligible for such registration. In addition, the local
board of education must use these schools for educational
purposes, not, for instance, as the local board of education
offices. e renovation must meet all of the normal build-
ing codes and educational program standards. e historic
school must also have "an extended life comparable to that
of a new facility," which means that it must last at least another years.
Funds will be allocated for the rehabilitation of these
The Booker T. Washington School, Atlanta's first public high school built for African Americans, was opened in 1924. It was the only African American public high school in Atlanta until 1947. The
landmark schools in "an amount which is lesser of the school is still in use today.
Preserving Georgia's Historic Schools
3
identified as the next priority in the system's Local Facilities Plan or to allow its entitlement earnings to accrue that year. Funds that accrue for one year may be used in the following year(s).
Funding is also available for the rehabilitation of a school building that has previously been vacated, as long as it is listed as a priority within the local facilities plan and the building meets certain educational standards and building codes. e Department of Education sets the educational standards, such as minimum classroom square footage, corridor width, and number of restrooms. e International Building Codes is the applicable set of building codes enforced. e International Building Codes handbook, however, contains a section that addresses existing buildings and offers some compliance alternatives for these buildings. ese codes should be used when rehabilitating historic buildings. It will be the financial responsibility of the local school board to make sure any vacant buildings meet necessary codes before funding is applied for and received through the Capital Outlay Program.
In addition, schools occupied prior to can earn up to , per instructional unit (classroom) for renovation costs and may receive $. per square foot for a major modification such as roof replacement or $ to $ a square foot for HVAC installation. Schools are only eligible to apply for this renovation money every years. According to OCGA --, "renovation" or "modernization" refers to construction projects that involve the replacement (or rehabilitation) of "major building components such as lighting, heating, air-conditioning, plumbing, roofing, electrical, electronic, or flooring systems; millwork; cabinet work and fixed equipment; energy retrofit packages; or room-size modifications within an existing facility, but excluding routine maintenance and repair items or operations."
Routine maintenance is paid for by the local board of
The Wynnton Elementary School in Columbus was built in 1923 around the earlier 1843 Wynnton Academy, a one-room building that now is used as the elementary school's library.
education through its typical revenue source of local property taxes. e local board may also receive approximately $ per pupil through the state's Quality Basic Education (QBE) funding program for maintenance and operation.
e SPLOST (Special Local Option Sales Tax) program is anavenue through which most municipalities can raise the extra funding needed to complete rehabilitation projects. In November , Georgia voters approved a constitutional amendment allowing local boards of education the option of calling for a referendum to ask their local voters to approve a one-percent SPLOST to pay for constructing new schools and rehabilitating existing ones. SPLOST is often combined with Capital Outlay funds to provide gap funding for projects. e rehabilitation of the Academy of Richmond County (SEE PHOTOS ON PAGES AND ) was paid for with SPLOST money.
e Georgia Department of Education projects the life expectancy of current new school construction to be years, though there are year-old schools in Georgia that have been maintained and still serve to educate the children of their respective communities. Prudently using both new and old buildings would not only benefit taxpayers, but would serve the needs of the state's growing student population for years to come. n
For more information about Georgia's Capital Outlay for Public School Facilities Construction, please contact the Facilities Services Unit of the Georgia Department of Education at 404-656-2454 or visit their Web site at www.doe.k12.ga.us/schools/facilities/ index.asp.
Atlanta's Joseph E. Brown Middle School was originally built in 1923 as a junior high school. Closed in 1992, it was reopened as a middle school after rehabilitation in the late 1990s.
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Additional Resources
The National Clearinghouse for Educational Facilities (NCEF) is a free public service funded by the U.S. Department of Education. Their Web site at www.edfacilities.org/rl/build_or_ renovate.cfm provides a resource list of links, books, and journal articles on how education agencies decide whether to rehabilitate existing historic school buildings in need of repair or construct new facilities. This site is an excellent source for information on planning, designing, funding, building, improving, and maintaining historic schools.
Historic Preservation Division
Case Study CHARLES ELLIS MONTESSORI SCHOOL, Savannah
Many historic schools across the United States continue to be used as schools by their respective communities. Below is a case study documenting the efforts of a group of parents who encouraged their local board of education to rehabilitate their existing school rather than demolish it to build a new facility. The rehabilitation ultimately saved local taxpayers approximately $6.5 million.
"More bathrooms, ramps for the handicapped, an elevator, four new classrooms, a renovation of existing library, a new gymnasium, cafeteria and playground are all part of preliminary plans to expand the oldest functional school in Chatham County." Writing in the Savannah Morning News in April , Jennifer Rose Marino was referring
to the Charles Ellis Montessori Elementary School (LEFT) located on TH and TH Streets in the historic Ardsley Park neighborhood of Savannah. e two-story, brick school building was constructed in and now houses Georgia's only public Montessori school, the most successful magnet school in Chatham County. In , the Chatham County Board of Education planned to increase enrollment and construct a new school building. Concerned parents wanted the school to retain its current size and location. ey organized and created Parent Advocates for Charles Ellis (PACE) to encourage the Board of Education to reconsider its plan to abandon the school.
According to an account of the proceedings, (*):
"PACE looked for the 20 acres the school board required [to build the new school] in the historic district and determined it would mean tearing down approximately 100 African-American homes....
The school board eventually conceded and began to draw up plans for renovations and additions to the school. However, the new plans consisted of a 300-student enrollment increase and two new wings that would drastically reduce the play yard....
PACE countered with a plan that included keeping the Montessori curriculum and becoming a true magnet--or charter--school, removing a non-compatible, non-workable 1950s addition and adding only one large wing which could raise enrollment to 500 students. They were also able to creatively rework parent and bus loading zones to retain an adequate play yard.
The board accepted their plan, and just over a year from the initial announcement to close Charles Ellis, the school board appointed an architecture firm to finalize designs for the estimated $4.3 million renovation and construction project. The price tag for the board's initial new school came in at around $11 million!"
Rehabilitation is now complete at this historic school. e new addition was built while school was in session and other work accomplished during summer break. Parents, students, teachers, neighborhood residents, and the local school board are pleased with the end result -- a ST century educational facility housed in an early TH century neighborhood school. n
Bibliography
"Board appoints architect for Ellis school expansion" by Jennifer Rose Marino in Savannah Morning News dated April 22, 1999.
*Jennifer Martin Lewis. "We become like that which we constantly admire: Justifying the use of historic school buildings as schools." UGA thesis for Masters in Historic Preservation, 2002, on file at the School of Environmental Design at UGA.
In addition to sources cited throughout this booklet, you may also want to refer to the following:
Abell, FAIA, Jan and Lee Braun. Historic School Reuse. Florida: Florida Division of Historic Resources and Tampa Preservation, Inc. (February 1997).
Beaumont, Constance. "Historic Neighborhood Schools Deliver 21st Century Education." National Clearinghouse for Educational Facilities (May 2003).
Community Anchors: Model State School Facility Policies and Best Practices. National Trust for Historic Preservation (May 2003).
Luce, W. Ray. "The Importance of Georgia's Historic Schools." Preservation Georgia (a newsletter of the Historic Preservation Division, Dept. of Natural Resources), June/July/August 1999.
Orr, Dorothy. A History of Education in Georgia. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1950.
Paxton, Gregory B. "Use money to renovate old schools." Atlanta Journal Constitution, January 8, 2000.
Paxton, Gregory B. "Funding Formulas Encourage School Sprawl, Not Smart Growth." The Rambler (a newsletter of The Georgia Trust), February 2000.
Reid, S.A. "Shedding light on city classrooms - Schools install windows as learning aid." Atlanta Journal Constitution, July 23, 2001.
Traub, Gerald P., AIA. 3R's for Schools: Rescue, Renovate, Reuse. North Carolina: The Historic Preservation Foundation of North Carolina, Inc. (1991).
Preserving Georgia's Historic Schools
5
Rehabilitate or Build New?
Myth: It costs more to reno-
vate a historic school than to
build a new one.
T here are often heated debates when school districts are trying to decide whether to rehabilitate an existing facility or construct a new building. ose who favor new school construction often cite the inadequacies of existing or historic schools. e following excerpts from the National Trust publication Historic Schools: A Roadmap for Saving Your School may be of assistance when arguing for the rehabilitation of historic school buildings:
ey [those who are against historic school renovation] will likely begin with a litany of maintenance concerns. Certainly, older schools need maintenance, but point out that the older buildings have received only Band Aids in recent years and that a major renovation would renew the systems to last another - years with no more mainte-
figured at minimal cost by moving nonbearing party walls.
Inadequate technology is often cited as a concern with older schools. Since older schools commonly have high ceilings and/or tunnel systems, routing communication cable throughout the building is not
Fact: Renovation often saves
money compared to the cost of building a new school. The cost per square foot for new construction should also factor:
1. costs of new site acquisition
and preparation;
2. old site demolition and dis-
posal of construction waste or stabilization [demolition costs are usually four to five percent of the overall replacement costs];
3. the cost of creating a new
infrastructure (water, sewer, etc.) at the new site; and
nance than new buildings require.
difficult, and costs
ere is a common perception that new construction is no more than new
maintenance free. While maintenance costs may diminish construction.
4. the cost of transporting the
children to the new site once
the school is completed.
for a year or two after a major construction project (new A leaky [building
or renovated), deferral of maintenance is how all buildings exterior] is another commonly cited deficiency warranting
deteriorate. e more chronic the deferral, the more geo- replacement. Leaks almost always relate to roofing and win-
metric the rate of deterioration.
dows. Both are chronic when maintenance has been spotty
Most new school buildings actually require more main- or of poor quality. A substantial renovation will address
tenance over time, since they lack the quality construction these matters with new roofs, and often new windows at a
of an earlier era (plaster rather than wallboard, mortar quality level at least comparable to new construction. And
rather than caulk, terrazzo rather than carpet). Also chal- ask if the maintenance staff has ever had a chronic roof leak
lenge the life expectancy of new construction. Will the on a new building. It is all too common.
new school last or years?
Safety is another major area of deficiency commonly
Another common argument is that the facility is too used to discredit historic schools. Agree that compliance
small, either in whole or in part. Point out that renovation with critical life safety issues is important and that only
often involves sensitive additions and that remodeling often detailed analysis can test the feasibility of remodeling to
reallocates existing space to meet today's needs. Individual meet safety concerns. Safety arguments against renovating
classrooms that are too small can be used for the many small an historic school are often made in an overly dramatic way
group functions now a part of school programming, or recon- to create a scare effect. Below are some examples:
n Structural integrity is often questioned and stories told
of a gymnasium roof collapse in some other community.
Getting professional engineers to attest to the soundness of
any existing structural element can be difficult in today's
litigious world, and even their qualifying statements on per-
fectly sound buildings can cast aspersions. If the integrity
of structural elements is impugned, demand the elements
be exposed with selective demolition and fully evaluated in
situ.
The Montezuma High School, designed by Atlanta architect William J.J. Chase, was constructed in 1921. The building was later used as the Macon County Elementary School but was demolished in 1999.
n Code violations are often cited as endangering student safety. Remember that there are different codes for existing buildings and new construction and that the critical element of any code is the life safety section (National Fire
6
Historic Preservation Division
Protection Association ). Other sections of the building
code are prescriptive based on current construction technol-
ogy so evaluators can often find numerous technical viola-
tions. Focus on the real threat to safety and the "spirit" or
intent of the code rather than its miniscule details [and work
with code officials to implement acceptable compliance
alternatives].
n Lead paint poses a threat if consumed or inhaled by
children. Options include complete abatement or contain-
ment where it is exposed to such intake. ese treatments
are not exotic or particularly difficult. ey can add some
expense that must be factored into the cost equation, but
beware the tendency to overly dramatize the risk and the
cost.
n Asbestos must have already been documented and abated
or contained with a regular documented inspection manage-
ment plan under the AHERA (Asbestos Hazard Emergency
Response Act) law applying to all school facilities. Still, its
presence can
Values inherent in some older schools that are not available in new construction:
frighten parents and teachers. Shortly after
n Large and handsome windows, the passage of
a common feature of older schools rarely available today n Decorative woodwork and tile n Terrazzo or wood floors (available but rarely afforded in new schools today) n High ceilings and grand spaces n Artwork in the form of murals or
AHERA in the S, when all school districts suddenly needed to address asbestos abatement to be in
other special features
compliance, the
small industry
that did such work was overwhelmed and costs skyrocketed.
Today, the field is competitive and the costs reasonable. It is
now a routine aspect of building renovation.
Secure and offer technical assistance from pro bono
design professionals sympathetic to and experienced in pres-
ervation to offset the bias often found in school architects
and construction managers with a vested interest in new
construction.
e other common argument for replacement is that
renovating a building in use is disruptive to education.
Point out that schools can often be renovated in phases over
the summer and that watching the process of renovation can
also be an educational experience for students.
ere is often an abiding skepticism of the feasibility
of renovation and an assumption of inflexibility of older
facilities. is is born of limited truth but each building is
unique, and as preservationists know, older buildings are
usually far more flexible than is commonly understood.
Designed by Columbus architect T.W. Smith, the Valdosta High School was constructed in 1905. The structure functioned as a school until its demolition in the mid-1970s.
Use success stories as case studies to illustrate how older schools can meet st century educational needs at reasonable costs and show illustrations of those schools to help... [everyone involved] see the potential of their older schools.
But it is still true that some schools can be feasibly renovated and others not. Argue that an objective analysis by an experienced design professional is the only way to test the feasibility of renovation, and indicate your preparedness to accept such a study. A feasibility study of the issues involved in renovation is the only tested way to evaluate the fit of an old building to contemporary educational uses (see the National Trust's publication, Historic Schools: Renovation vs. Replacement & the Role of a Feasibility Study).
It is critical this study be executed with great objectivity and fairness, and given the prejudices within the construction industry for new construction, select a design team with experience in renovating historic schools. n
To read the entire publication and related studies, please visit the National Trust's web site at www.nationaltrust.org/issues/ historic_schools.html. Reprinted with permission, National Trust for Historic Preservation, 1785 Massachusetts Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20036, 202-588-6053, www.nationaltrust.org.
Additional Resources
The National Trust for Historic Preservation (NTHP) has posted 30 historic neighborhood school success stories to the "Issues and Initiatives" section of its Web site at www.nationaltrust.org/issues/schools/studies_intro.html. Each case study describes the school's history, rehabilitation, and present use, along with reasonable solutions to: building code compliance, structural problems, deferred maintenance, mechanical-HVAC upgrades, safety issues, compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), integration of 21st century technology, adaptation to modern educational programmatic needs, and sympathetic additions to historic structures.
Preserving Georgia's Historic Schools
7
Deferred Maintenance: The #1 Georgia's Historic
problem facing historic schools
Schools in the National Register of Historic
Places
Not every older school build- Furthermore, some state and local ing can, realistically, be kept policies actually work to encourage in continued use -- but this neglect. e policy of New York,
many can and should be! School described in a report by the state
officials will not be
comptroller, is typi-
able to make decisions wisely until they can look past assumptions that "old" means flawed or substandard, and
Assumption: "Old" means
out of date, or even obsolete.
Reality: It's not age that
undermines an older school building--it's lack of care.
cal of many states: "ere is a built-in fiscal incentive for school districts to avoid prudent maintenance expen-
instead make in-
ditures, and instead
formed decisions based on the merits let physical structures deteriorate un-
and condition of each building.
til replacement is the only real option.
Even relatively new schools that do State aid reimbursement is provided
not receive the regular maintenance explicitly for capital expenditures at
they need -- from painting and patch- a generous rate, whereas it is not for
ing to periodic upgrading of materials routine maintenance."
and systems -- will age in a hurry. Of Yet when older schools are prop-
course, the longer
erly maintained
these tasks have According to the National and upgraded as been neglected, Clearinghouse for Educational needed, they can
the more costly the Facilities, about 14.1 percent of continue to serve
repairs. Poor quality additions or improvements also lead to the percep-
the operating budgets of local school districts was devoted to maintenance in 1920 but only about four percent by 1990.
their communities well. When school districts take proper care of their
tion that the origi-
building stock, it
nal building has unfixable flaws.
demonstrates that they are making
Why do school districts fail to keep wise use of public money and provid-
their older buildings in good repair? ing good stewardship of the public's
Not surprisingly, it all comes down to resources. n
money. Year after year, school districts divert money from maintenance to pay for other pressing needs -- books and supplies; computers and special equipment; teacher's salaries, etc. Particularly when there is an anti-tax sentiment among policy makers and
This article is excerpted and reprinted from A Community Guide to Saving Older Schools with the permission of Preservation Books, National Trust for Historic Preservation, 1785 Massachusetts Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20036, 202-588-6053;
www.nationaltrust.org.
voters, school districts have no choice
but to find ways to keep their spend-
ing down -- so building maintenance
gets postponed.
Over the years, school buildings in Georgia have changed from the small, one-room wooden schoolhouses that proliferated across the rural landscape, to the larger, one and two-story brick structures that were built in towns and cities in the 1920s, to the even larger, rambling campuses built in the 1960s after desegregation. Approximately 120 of these Georgia schools are currently listed in the National Register of Historic Places, including Columbus' circa 1843 Wynnton Academy (photo on page 4), which is still used as a public school. (The National Register of Historic Places is our country's official list of historic buildings, structures, sites, objects and districts worthy of preservation.)
An exciting project currently taking place in Georgia will help to document the developmental history and evolution of all these schools. A statewide study is underway to identify the architectural styles and types of historic school buildings as well as provide an overview of the connection between educational philosophy in Georgia and the physical facilities in which students were taught. This information will be prepared on a National Register Multiple Property Documentation Form (MPDF) for Georgia's historic public schools. The MPDF will simplify the process of nominating individual school buildings to the National Register and will encourage the recognition of the significance of our state's historic schools. The project is scheduled for completion in the fall of 2004.
For more information about nominating a historic school in your community to the National Register of Historic Places, please contact HPD's National Register coordinator at 404-651-6782.
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Historic Preservation Division
Adaptive Use: A New Life for Vacant Schools
W hile it is most desirable to maintain school buildings as schools, unfortunately, there are circumstances under which these historic buildings are abandoned. However, if buildings are in good condition, they can continue to serve their communities in a variety of ways. Common forms of adaptive use include educational, community, residential, office, and commercial uses.
OTHER EDUCATIONAL USES
e preferred adaptive reuse for school buildings is their retention as instructional facilities. e use of school buildings for these types of uses will require the fewest modifications, thus costing less and resulting in fewer alterations to the building's historic fabric. Middle and elementary schools can easily convert to magnet, charter or preschools, while high schools have often been converted to middle schools. e local boards of education could move into a vacant school, using classrooms for administrative offices space, curriculum resource centers, or teacher training/workshops. Each of these uses maintains the building, while maintaining an educational presence in the community.
Other educational uses include:
n Charter schools n College continuing education or
satellite classrooms n Administrative offices n Preschools n Day care centers n Headstart centers n After-school enrichment
programs
The 1926 William Robinson School in the Summerville Historic District of Augusta has been used by the Richmond County Board of Education for its curriculum center since the 1980s.
Massie School, which served the city of Savannah as an elementary school from its opening in 1856 to its closing in 1974, continues to serve the city as the Massie Heritage Interpretation Center, a unit of the Savannah-Chatham County Public Schools. Located in Savannah's National Historic Landmark District, Massie School is now a museum and resource center for heritage education, especially as it relates to the city's history and environment. Massie offers its visitors a chance to relive a day in the life of their ancestors in the center's authentic 19th-century classroom. The center also features a multicultural resource library as well as a heritage and history archive and library.
Preserving Georgia's Historic Schools
9
COMMUNITY USES
Historic school buildings are often converted to provide community services. Examples include adaptive use as office space for local nonprofit organizations or federal, state, county, and municipal governmental agencies. Many schools in Georgia have been converted into community cultural centers containing libraries, local history museums, art galleries, and performing arts groups. Churches could easily adapt a school building to their needs, as classrooms could convert to Sunday school rooms, the auditorium to the sanctuary, and the cafeteria to the fellowship hall.
Community uses include:
n Offices for non-profit organizations or governmental agencies
n Cultural arts centers n Conference centers n Performing arts centers n Museums/Galleries n Libraries
Madison Graded School: This spectacular 1895 Romanesque Revival school located on Main Street in Madison served as a public school until 1957. In the 1970s, the school was converted to the Madison-Morgan Cultural Center and contains a regional history museum, a restored early 20th century classroom and four art galleries with changing exhibits. The school's original 397-seat auditorium, whose original woodwork, seats and chandelier have all been restored, now offers space for theatre, dance, and musical productions, including the Center's annual Children's Theatre Festival and Chamber Music Festival.
Cochran Municipal Building and Grammar School: These two historic buildings have both served the students and citizens of the city of Cochran since their construction. The circa 1928 Municipal Building originally contained the city hall, municipal auditorium, and four classrooms for the nearby high school. Today, the building is home to the local Chamber of Commerce, Cochran-Bleckley Arts Alliance, and a social services agency, while the auditorium, which was completely restored in 1991, is used by the entire community for cultural programs. The circa 1942 grammar school building is used by the Cochran Police Department and Magistrate Court.
The Leila Ellis
Grammar School,
built in 1937 and
located on Lee
Street in down-
town Valdosta,
was converted
into a public
health
facility
and community
service center in
2003. The HIV/AIDS clinic provides health services to low-in-
come county residents. Lowndes County put together several
funding sources to make this project a reality. In addition to the
county's contribution of $100,000 in Special Local Option Sales
Tax (SPLOST) funds, the county received a $500,000 Commu-
nity Development Block Grant (CDBG), along with $473,000 in
Housing Opportunities for Persons with Aids (HOPWA) funds.
Grantville's Thomas Glanton School was built in 1936 in the Neoclassical style. The structure, located on LaGrange Street, served Grantville as a school until the 1980s. After closing the school, the city decided to rehabilitate the building to consolidate city services into one location. The 12,210 square foot facility now houses the city hall, police department, and city library, with the Grantville Senior Center housed in a 1954 annex to the historic school.
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Historic Preservation Division
RESIDENTIAL/OFFICE/COMMERCIAL USES
Conversion of a school into residential units is an option, including apartments, condominiums, lofts, and assisted living centers for the elderly or persons with disabilities. Many schools have been modified into retail/commercial uses, such as farmer's markets, restaurants, antique malls or as office space. Finally, schools may also provide mixed-use space, containing commercial ventures, along with housing units for employees.
Residential/Office/Commercial uses include:
n Public or private housing such as apartments or condominiums
n Elderly housing or assisted living centers
n Private offices n Mixed-used commercial
development
Roosevelt High School, located on Rosalia Street in the Grant Park neighborhood of Atlanta, originally opened in 1925 as the city's female high school. The 136,350 square foot structure was converted into 92 apartments in the late 1980s. The developer took advantage of the federal Rehabilitation Investment Tax Credit Program (RITC) to help fund the project. Administered in Georgia through the Historic Preservation Division (HPD) of the Department of Natural Resources, the RITC offers a federal income tax credit equal to 20 percent of qualified rehabilitation expenses. For more information about historic preservation tax incentive programs, please contact HPD's Tax Incentives coordinator at 404-651-5566.
The 1930 Colonial Revival West Point Public School served as an educational facility until its closing in 1986. In 1995, the city announced plans to demolish the building; however, concerned citizens organized as Our Town, Inc., a non-profit group committed to the preservation and restoration of the school. In 1999, the group received a $15,000 Georgia Heritage grant from HPD to complete detailed exterior rehabilitation plans. In 2001, Our Town, Inc. partnered with a private developer to rehabilitate the building into 22 elderly housing units (18 one-bedroom and four two-bedroom). The auditorium will also be restored for use as a public performance facility. The partnership plans to use federal and state preservation tax incentives to assist with the project.
Historic Rosenwald Schools in Georgia
In 2001, the Historic Preservation Division (HPD) of the Geor- enough interest to merit a listing on the National Trust's
gia Department of Natural Resources joined an initiative by the list of the " Most Endangered Historic Places."
National Trust for Historic Preservation to
e future for the remaining Ros-
identify and document some of Georgia's
enwald schools in Georgia is fairly
most endangered historic educational
positive. Attention from the "Most
resources, the Rosenwald schools. Jeanne
Endangered" listing and subsequent
Cyriaque, HPD's African American pro-
research has increased community aware-
grams coordinator, has spearheaded this
ness of the schools and the importance
effort. e Georgia African American His-
of their preservation. Today, about half
toric Preservation Network (GAAHPN)
of Georgia's existing Rosenwald schools
and the Georgia Trust for Historic
are vacant, but the other half are being
Preservation are also supporters of this
used by local communities. e most
important project.
popular adaptive reuse for these build-
During early OTH century segrega-
The Noble Hill school was constructed in 1923 and was the first school in northwest
ings is as a community center, but others
tion, Sears Roebuck & Company CEO Georgia to be constructed with Rosenwald are being used as daycare centers, church
Julius Rosenwald established a matching funds. Following its restoration in 1983, it classrooms, and museums. Additionally,
fund to encourage the construction of
now functions as a history museum and cultural center.
the Rosenwald School Initiative project
schools for African American children
of the National Trust is currently seeking
in rural southern communities. In all, approximately , dedicated rehabilitation funding to restore remaining Rosen-
Rosenwald schools were constructed in southern states from wald schools. n
through the S. Most were abandoned in the S following integration. Of the buildings constructed for schools in Georgia between -, only are known to remain. e disappearance of the Rosenwald schools has fueled
For more information about identifying and preserving your community's Rosenwald School, please contact HPD's African American programs coordinator at 404-656-4768 or visit www.rosenwaldschools.com.
Preserving Georgia's Historic Schools
11
Historic Rural Schools Initiative Goals of the Historic
Rural Schools Initiative:
T he Historic Rural Schools Initiative was created and developed by Andrea Gerhart MacDonald, historic preservation planner for the South Georgia Regional
Ocilla Elementary School and served the community until
1. Determine new uses for
vacant historic school buildings that will accomplish identified
Development Center (SGRDC). From the start of her the late S.
community needs.
tenure there in July , Ms. MacDonald recognized the Approximately
potential role that the region's historic schools could play in
community
community-based revitalization efforts. "During the first few members attended
2. Achieve greater awareness
of historic resources within the region.
months as I traveled the region and learned my way around our communities, I saw that every city,
a public meeting in Ocilla in June . Participants shared fond memories of
3. Provide planning and tech-
nical assistance to accomplish reuse of vacant or underutilized historic school buildings
county, and the school and its (SGRDC's role).
nearly every importance in their dirt road had a lives. Led by Ms. vacant or unde- MacDonald, the
4. Assist in the rehabilitation
and reuse of at least one historic school in each county.
rutilized school meeting focused on
building. Some ideas for reusing the Ocilla Public School building and possi-
The Ocilla Public School's 700-seat audito- were modest ble funding sources for its rehabilitation. To date, the project
rium will be restored and promoted as a wood structures, has received a $, Georgia Heritage grant from HPD
local and regional performance venue.
and others were to produce a rehabilitation plan for the school along with
more complex brick structures, but all truly represented the construction documents and a $, Local Development
pride of the people who built them."
Fund Grant from the Department of Community Affairs
Over the next few months, Ms. MacDonald began devel- to repair the metal roof and all wooden windows.
oping her ideas for the Initiative. Working with the Historic Other projects currently involved in the Historic Rural
Preservation Division (HPD) of the Department of Natural Schools Initiative include the former Hahira High School in
Resources, she developed a field survey form and database Lowndes County, Eureka School in Turner County, and the
to document historic school buildings and their representa- Oaklawn Academy Auditorium in Lanier County. n
tive sites. Interns began survey work in April . In total, The Historic Rural Schools Initiative is a model for other commu historic school buildings (approximately years or nities or regions that wish to document and preserve their his-
older) were surveyed in the nine-county SGRDC region. toric school buildings. For more information, please contact Andrea e first community in the region to embrace the proj- Gerhart MacDonald at 229-333-5277.
ect was the city of Ocilla
in Irwin County. Ocilla
has a centrally located
historic school building
from the Works Progress
Administration (WPA)
era that had been vacant
since . Completed
in , the Ocilla Public
School housed both
elementary and high
school students. Later, a
new high school was con-
structed and the building
was converted into the Exterior of the circa 1936 Ocilla Public School.
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Historic Preservation Division