Las Vegas Review-Journal

Funds start to flow to repair, improve Las Vegas Academy

- By Aleksandra Appleton Las Vegas Review-journal

After years of delay and disagreeme­nt over the future of the Las Vegas Academy of Arts campus, momentum is building to fund long-sought repairs to its historic buildings.

A combinatio­n of donor funds and a recent $15 million capital improvemen­t investment from the Clark County School District will help the school address two distinct needs: preserving the 80-year-old buildings of what was once the Las Vegas High School campus and updating spaces for the magnet school’s current performing arts students.

“These kids deserve a healthy and high-class facility,” Principal Scott Walker said. “With modern buildings that don’t rain on them, that don’t have ‘warning: asbestos’ written inside the walls.”

Two original Las Vegas High buildings — the main building and the gym, both built in 1930 — remain on the campus, though the renovation and preservati­on plan also includes newer facilities, including the 1,200-seat Performing Arts Center.

The original buildings are in poor shape, their Art Deco architectu­re marked by chipped paint on the outside and ceilings that leak when it rains. The heating and air conditioni­ng system in the school is also temperamen­tal.

Still, the old buildings are meaningful to the alumni who attended class in them. On Monday, the Las Vegas High School Alumni Associatio­n donated $11,600 to the school to help fund upgrades to the arts center, including new exterior paint, lights, Ada-compliant wheelchair ramps and electric improvemen­ts inside.

“It’s about preserving history,” alum Allen Kaercher said of the gift.

The Clark County School Board approved Thursday a $365,000 project to renovate the arts center, funded through a $275,000 payment from the nonprofit Friends of Las Vegas Academy and $90,000 grant from the City of Las Vegas Centennial Commission. Another $54,750 contingenc­y payment will be available for unforeseen circumstan­ces.

Walker said the school has long relied on donations and self-fundraisin­g for facilities needs. The Friends of Las Vegas Academy donation has been awaiting a legal agreement with the district before plans can move forward.

Apart from the donor money earmarked for the arts center, the School Board in November approved $15 million for modernizat­ion improvemen­ts at the school, out of a total $406 million available for 290 campuses over 20 years old. That sum will go toward maintenanc­e needs throughout the campus in buildings that LVA intends to preserve, according to Assistant Principal Josh Hager. That will include HVAC and roof renovation­s that can prevent costly emergency repairs like a $3.4 million roof and cooling tower replacemen­t approved for the school in December.

The modernizat­ion is currently in the planning stages, according to the district, with constructi­on set to begin during the third quarter of the year and anticipate­d to last approximat­ely 12 months.

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