The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

District ponders options for site of former Inman Middle School.

- By Vanessa Mccray Vanessa.mccray@ajc.com

Atlanta school officials are trying to decide the future of the former Inman Middle School in the heart of the Virginia-highland neighborho­od.

The 4.2-acre site, situated in a walkable area brimming with homes, eateries and parks, is a high-profile location in Atlanta Public Schools’ property portfolio.

Inman stopped operating as a middle school last year, after the district completed a $52 million renovation to open Howard Middle School about 2 miles south.

Now the district is trying to determine what will become of the Inman site.

APS will host a meeting, billed as a “community listening session,” at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday to gather public input.

“We want to hear from our community about the future use of the building,” Superinten­dent Lisa Herring told parents in a recent letter.

The Inman site is being used now to house students from Morningsid­e Elementary School, while crews work on a constructi­on project there. Morningsid­e is undergoing a more than $17 million renovation and expansion project scheduled to wrap up in July 2022.

Officials cited overcrowdi­ng at Inman as a reason why the district invested money into renovating Howard, which has room for several hundred more students.

For years, district officials kept an eye on enrollment growth in schools that feed into Grady High School on the city’s east side. Officials previously said those schools are running out of space.

The pandemic makes student numbers more difficult to predict. APS recently announced it was pausing a larger facilities master planning project to give experts more time to study trends.

There are several possibilit­ies for the Inman site. The district could launch a new kindergart­en-through-fifth-grade elementary school at the site.

It also could open a fourthand fifth-grade campus or a fifthand sixth-grade campus, both of which could serve students from several surroundin­g schools, or be configured in other ways.

Parents interested in what happens should participat­e in the discussion, officials said.

“They need to share their ideas,” said Michelle Olympiadis, the school board member who represents the area.

Those wishing to attend the virtual meeting can register online at bit.ly/31ilvnn.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/AJC 2020 ?? APS Superinten­dent Lisa Herring wants “to hear from our community about the future use of the building.”
HYOSUB SHIN/AJC 2020 APS Superinten­dent Lisa Herring wants “to hear from our community about the future use of the building.”

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