The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Cost doubles to convert former Black school

Gwinnett’s Hooper-renwick facility to be turned into library/museum.

- By Alia Malik alia.malik@ajc.com

The cost to convert the former Hooper-renwick School into a themed library and museum has doubled, as work begins on an addition that will house artifacts from what was once Gwinnett County’s only high school for Black students.

Gwinnett County and the city of Lawrencevi­lle agreed in 2020 to collaborat­e on preserving the segregated school. Gwinnett budgeted $7.6 million for the project from the 2017 special purpose local option sales tax, and Lawrencevi­lle chipped in $1.7 million.

But the Gwinnett County Board of Commission­ers this summer allocated $9.4 million to the project from the general fund after county staff cited unforeseen design and constructi­on costs. The additional money for the project accounts for nearly half the $20.2 million increase in general fund spending, compared to January’s budget, that the county cited earlier this summer when it held property tax rates steady.

In the past three years, a structural engineer determined the old brick 12-classroom building needs to be shored up, said Mark Leblanc, facility constructi­on program manager for Gwinnett. The parking lot now has to be tiered because the property slopes in two directions. Constructi­on and materials costs have risen since the coronaviru­s pandemic. A historical study and a preservati­on committee of former students have unearthed new artifacts and generated new exhibit plans.

“The end result will be a building that can be used for the next 50 years,” LEBlanc said.

The 11,000-square-foot building will double in size, including a two-story addition with a separate entrance to the museum and a community event space.

The preservati­on committee has collected yearbooks, class rings, school event programs, photos, an old desk and a piano, Leblanc said. The museum will include the school’s gymnasium floor. Oral histories of the school will be played at a kiosk and quoted on the walls of the exhibit, he said.

“The best artifact we have is our preservati­on committee,” Leblanc said. “This has been a real collaborat­ion.”

Pews and stained glass windows will also be displayed from the now-demolished Mount Calvary United Methodist Church across the street, where Hooper-renwick students performed concerts and plays.

New South Associates produced a historical report on the African American school system in Gwinnett for the project, from which the county is extracting six storyboard­s, Leblanc said.

Part of the funding increase will pay for museum-quality glass display cases and the creation of murals from old photograph­s and maps, Leblanc said.

Hooper-renwick was built in 1951 and served students from the first through 12th grades until desegregat­ion in 1968. There was another Black school in Duluth at the time, but it stopped at eighth grade. After desegregat­ion, Gwinnett County Public Schools used the Hooper-renwick building for storage, offices and an alternativ­e school.

The original building will become a branch of the Gwinnett County Public Library system, with added space in the back for tech-focused “learning labs.” Some classroom walls have been demolished to create a large open space for the library, but each classroom’s footprint will be preserved with room numbers and different colors, Leblanc said.

The original wooden ceiling beams will be exposed and more windows will be installed similar to those originally in the school.

“We did not want to lose the history of this building,” Leblanc said.

Completion is expected at the end of next year, he said.

 ?? JAMIE SPAAR FOR THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON ?? At approximat­ely 25,000 square feet on 3.8 acres, a new themed library and museum is rising from the former Hooper-renwick School in Lawrencevi­lle, once Gwinnett County’s only high school for Black students.
JAMIE SPAAR FOR THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON At approximat­ely 25,000 square feet on 3.8 acres, a new themed library and museum is rising from the former Hooper-renwick School in Lawrencevi­lle, once Gwinnett County’s only high school for Black students.

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