Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Aug Prep plan delayed; new K-12 opens in 2026

Cardinal Stritch campus needs unexpected work

- Rory Linnane

After Cardinal Stritch University abruptly closed last summer, it seemed its buildings would quickly find new life as St. Augustine Preparator­y Academy bought the campus and announced plans for a K-12 Christian school to open there in fall 2025.

Those plans have been pushed back a year, as school officials said it became clear the buildings were less move-in ready than expected. According to a Tuesday announceme­nt, the now $100million project will involve demolishin­g some buildings, renovating others and constructi­ng new buildings.

The unforeseen costs are not a dealbreake­r for St. Augustine Preparator­y Academy, known as Aug Prep, which is heavily funded by the Ramirez Family Foundation. Gus Ramirez, who for decades led regional manufactur­ing company Husco, used Husco profits to launch the foundation with his wife, Becky. Their daughter, Abby Andrietsch, is the CEO of Aug Prep, which opened its south side campus in 2017.

The family foundation paid $24 million for the 43-acre Stritch campus, which is in Fox Point and Glendale. The Ramirez family and Husco have committed a total of $75 million to the project.

When Ramirez first shared plans for the Stritch campus, he anticipate­d demolishin­g dormitory buildings to make way for athletic fields, but he expected the school would be able to use other existing buildings and would not require new constructi­on.

Now, the school is planning to demolish all buildings except the gym, library, campus center and fine arts building, which will be renovated. With new constructi­on, the campus is expected to have STEM labs, music and fine arts spaces, a new fieldhouse, a turf soccer field and an outdoor track.

Beginning in fall 2026, the new campus, known as Aug Prep North,

will initially serve over 300 students in ninth grade and grades K4 through six, according to the school’s announceme­nt, and will continue to grow. After a second phase of expansion, the campus is meant to ultimately serve over 2,000 students.

When Ramirez announced plans for the campus in August, he said the campus could draw Milwaukee students as well as suburban students, with potentiall­y 30%-50% of students paying tuition — a departure from the current campus on the south side, where 99% of students do not pay tuition. Students qualify for vouchers if their family’s income falls under certain levels.

Ramirez said he wants the new campus to be more diverse than the current campus, where state data show the vast majority of students are Hispanic or Latino.

He said he envisioned the new campus serving more Black students and white students, specifically including students from Ozaukee County because of the lack of local private high schools. He said families may be looking for a Christian alternativ­e to public schools, which he said have seen “the woke coming in.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY MIKE DE SISTI/MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Some buildings at the former Cardinal Stritch University campus are being torn down to make way for new buildings being put up by St. Augustine Preparator­y Academy. Aug Prep plans to open a new K-12 Christian school on the site in 2026.
PHOTOS BY MIKE DE SISTI/MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Some buildings at the former Cardinal Stritch University campus are being torn down to make way for new buildings being put up by St. Augustine Preparator­y Academy. Aug Prep plans to open a new K-12 Christian school on the site in 2026.
 ?? ?? Buildings are being torn down at the former Cardinal Stritch University campus in Fox Point. The site is the future home of St. Augustine Preparator­y Academy.
Buildings are being torn down at the former Cardinal Stritch University campus in Fox Point. The site is the future home of St. Augustine Preparator­y Academy.

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