OVERHAUL ON TAP FOR OLD SCHOOL SQUARE
Plan would include fountain, pavilions, large amphitheater.
DELRAY BEACH — More open space, an amphitheater that comfortably seats thousands and a decorative fountain centerpiece are concepts being floated for a major revitalization at downtown Delray Beach’s Old School Square.
The historically designated cultural campus, on Atlantic Avenue at Swinton Avenue, has long awaited a renaissance, said Bob Currie, an architect overseeing the revitalization.
“It can’t stand still,” Currie, who championed the revitalization of the city’s Pineapple Grove Arts District, said at a recent city meeting. “It’s got to move forward. It’s got to look to the future.”
The main goal, set after several rounds of public input, is to make the cultural center more open and parklike, to encourage downtown visitors to walk through the campus.
Several trees that surround Old School Square would be replanted elsewhere, so they no longer block the view of the campus’ greenspace.
There also are plans to add artwork, benches and pavilions for shade.
The campus will provide a “respite from the rigors of Atlantic Avenue,” said Rob Steele, president of Old School Square.
The campus is home to Delray Beach’s iconic 100foot WEST PALM BEACH — A man who was in a standoff for several hours Friday with Palm Beach County Sheriff ’s deputies at a mobile home park near Drexel Road and Okeechobee Boulevard is in Christmas tree during the holiday season. The tree traditionally goes up at the south entrance of Old School Square, but was moved deeper into the campus this year.
That was the first step in transforming the space, said Mayor Cary Glickstein. Limiting the overwhelming number of festivals and events once held at Old School Square was another step.
About a year ago, the city cut down on the number of events permitted downtown, which forced several beloved festivals, such as the Garlic Fest and the Bacon and Bourbon Festival, out of the city.
Some of the changes proposed at Old School Square aren’t as welcome to city leaders.
The outdoor amphitheater at the site would transform from a space for a crowd of 300, to a covered arena with terrace seating for up to 3,000 people.
While the city set aside funding for Old School Square’s revitalization, the amphitheater should be funded privately, given that it will transform the space from “a mom-andpop venue to something more sophisticated,” Glickstein said.
A centerpiece at the campus would be a ground-level fountain, similar to the fountain feature in downtown West Palm Beach, where children often play. The fountain would be operated during the summer months.
During late fall and winter, the fountain space would house the 100-foot Christmas tree.
The fountain could become “very expensive to maintain,” however, said Commissioner Shelly Petrolia.
The plan could cost as much as $12 million, depending on what features Old School Square moves forward with.
Because the site is in a historic district, the plan must be reviewed by the city’s historic preservation board before it moves to the city commission for approval.