Article in the Annandale Advocate, April 15, 2008 - with their permission:

Group mobilizes to save 1922 building

By Brenda Erdahl

Apr 15, 2008


The fate of the 1922 portion of the Annandale Middle School is up for debate again, three years after it was first recommended that the school district tear it down. On Monday night, April 28, a task force assigned the job of creating a plan to maintain quality facilities in the district will present a proposal to the school board that includes a long-term goal of abandoning the middle school site starting with demolition of the 1922 building. Three years ago, few voiced opposition to the idea. That won't be the case this time around. A group of people who want to keep the 1922 building a viable part of the public education system and the community have banded together and will make their feelings known at the meeting. "I've spoken to hundreds of people interested in saving the 1922 building," said Jill Bishop, an outspoken opponent of demolishing the historical school. "We have petitions at businesses. The coffee shop is going on its third page of names." Bishop and others hope to remind board members that you can get to the same goal by taking different paths, and that the goal for both parties is the same, an excellent place to learn and teach. The question is which path will the six school board members choose to take the school district down. Proponents of saving the 1922 building want to renovate the space to make it a place where kids can concentrate on learning and teachers can concentrate on teaching. "Teachers love teaching there because of the natural light, the tall ceilings and the space," said Laura Hood Beckman, the only member of the task force who voted against demolishing the school. "But with that comes heating and cooling issues, leaky windows and roofs. Teachers and students shouldn't have to put up with that." Certain updates that both groups can agree upon include new windows, tuck pointing, a new roof, a new heating, cooling and air exchange system, the addition of an elevator and a lift into the lower gym. If it were to be renovated, the task force would also recommend putting a commons area and cafeteria in the old building, Supt. Steve Niklaus said. The current cafeteria is too small and lacks windows, up-to-date equipment and appropriate airflow. All in all it would cost an additional $1.2 to $2 million to renovate the old building over building an entirely new school, Niklaus said. To make the building more energy efficient, the superintendent would recommend the ceilings be lowered, which means there would be no room for the larger windows Beckman said the teachers so enjoy. The rooms are also too big for current class sizes and not an efficient use of space in his opinion. Prime location But architectural design is only one of the benefits Beckman and Bishop see. The 1922 building is in a prime location, close to downtown and all the amenities it has to offer including proximity to businesses, area churches, Bendix Elementary, the high school and the Annandale Care Center, places students often walk to. "It's safer than being way out on some acreage somewhere," said Rose Mary Nelson, another proponent of saving the 1922 building. The task force on the other hand sees the school's location as one of its disadvantages. Not only is it landlocked, it is on a site that is too small, according to state standards. What that means is that the district won't have the option of adding on to the school if more space is needed in the future. "The state has made it pretty clear to us that they would not approve any additions unless we tore something else down," Niklaus said. The general feeling in the school district for many years has been not to invest a large amount of money in the 1922 building, outside of keeping it functional, because its fate has always been unknown, Niklaus said. Three years ago when an earlier task force first recommended the demolition of the building it received no indication that the community cared about the building. Bishop remembers clearly when Jeff Lundquist, a member of the 2005 task force and the most recent one, told her that one day over coffee at In Hot Water. It's what inspired her to publish her first letter in the Advocate opposing demolition of the 85-year-old school and encouraging others to speak out. There have now been two meetings at the Snooty Fox Gallery for those protesting the task force's recommendation. Close to 35 people attended the most recent meeting on Wednesday, April 9, including several members of the task force and Niklaus. "We concluded that you can get to the same conclusion by taking different paths, which is excellent learning space and teaching space," Beckman said. The compromise Members of the task force voted 18 to 1 against renovating the 1922 building because they didn't want to get the school district locked into a long-term commitment at a site they saw as inefficient to their future needs. But there's an amendment in the task force's proposal if enough of the community shows an interest in keeping the 1922 building alive, Niklaus said. Within the next year or two the district expects to go to the voters for a bond issue for approximately $25 million based on information gathered by the task force. The money would be put toward remodeling Bendix Elementary's open-air classroom design, adding a sports complex and making improvements to AMS, which would include demolishing the 1922 building. If the voters approve a bond issue, the money the district would have used to tear down the old school - $100,000 to $150,000 - would be given to the group of community members to fix up the old school as they deem necessary. The district would essentially hand over the building for the group to do with as they please as long as it is compatible with the rest of the school, Niklaus said. That would mean the group would have to get approval from the school board before making any renovations. Anything would be considered including turning the building into apartments, a community center, an art gallery or a private business. Those are just a few ideas Niklaus has heard. In exchange, the district would no longer pay the utilities, but would hand that cost over to the group of community members as well. The task force's recommendation is to build an addition on to Bendix for the fifth grade. That would make the remainder of the middle school much roomier. It would also alleviate congestion in the cafeteria, which would remain where it is. Eventually the district would move toward building a new middle school on a different site. On April 28, school board members will have their first official look at the task force's recommendation, but they are not likely to act on it until the May meeting, Niklaus said. Now is the time to approach the voters for money for major improvements to the schools because in 2009 the mortgage on the high school will be paid off, he said.