Del Valle Specialty School

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122 STUDENTS (CURRENT) 4.68 ACRES 24,852 SQUARE FEET 445 PARKING SPACES

Del Valle High School is Livermore Valley Joint Unified School District’s con"nua"on high school. The campus consists of an “I” shaped Building A with an exis"ng square footage of 24,852. Building A was designed with a double loaded corridor, originally constructed in 1936, and repaired in 1944. Since that "me, there have been a few upgrades, primarily site related. Site improvements were made in 1960, a sun screen was added in 1965, a greenhouse in 1975, and the tennis courts in 2002. The most recent updates to the building include an electrical and HVAC upgrade in 2005 and the windows were replaced in 2007.

5TH ST.

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The building contains classrooms, administra"on spaces, a mul"purpose space that includes a kitchen and dining room, and a library. There is an a#c storage space located above the main entry off of 5th Street. The building was constructed with wood framing, and is currently the only building on the 4.68 acre site. There are currently no portables housed on the site, but there are a number of storage containers, tennis courts, hardcourts, and two baseball diamonds on the south side of the site. Parking is located to the north of the building on 5th Street. The current enrollment is 122 students, but it can hold up to 150-155 students if needed.

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6TH ST.

Del Valle offers a number of classes in skilled trades, office skills, and culinary arts. Del Valle’s Culinary Academy began in the 2013/2014 school year, but there are currently only 8 students in the program. There has been a proposal to locate a portable building behind Building A to house the Culinary Academy, but at the moment there are not enough par"cipa"ng students to make this a feasible op"on. For the "me being the students walk over to Livermore High School to use their underu"lized lecture room in the student union building. There are also no classroom spaces available to the skilled trade courses, including carpentry, electrical, plumbing, welding, etc. The office skills courses could be moved into the library space. The current administra"on space is quite small, with no conference rooms, and no office space for the mental health providers that come in from off-campus. The mul"-purpose and kitchen space are quite generous, and the campus offers free and reduced meals. These meals are prepared off-campus and are only warmed up on loca"on. These larger spaces are only used by twelve to fi?een students, making them highly underu"lized. 165


E#$%&$'( I')*'&+-/ The inventory summarizes the building square footage and classroom count per building. Addi!onally, the diagram provides, for a fixed point in !me, the actual assigned use for the spaces on campus and were derived from an assessment of the master schedule. The matrix below summarizes building area as well as the assumed number of available classrooms. $ ! "

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Administration Art Cafeteria Classroom Gymnasium Kitchen Library Media Multi-Purpose

166

Music Restroom Stage Science Classroom Support Technical Theater Not in Scope

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Gymnasium

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Art

Kitchen

Music

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Cafeteria

Library

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Technical

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Media

Stage

Theater

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C !"#$# ! Building A is the only building on the Del Valle campus, and it is a wood-framed, permanent building.

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ZĂŵƉĞĚ WŽƌƚĂďůĞƐ ; ŶŚĂŶĐĞĚͿ

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Del Valle High School 167


C•••••••• A••!••"!•• This overview shows the general condi#on of the exis#ng facili#es, and was completed based on informa#on gathered from mee#ngs with the district facili#es, maintenance and opera#ons staff, a review of exis#ng drawings, and a walk through with district personnel and the architectural and engineering teams. The results are summarized here and color coded by likely need for, and level of, renova#on. The matrix outlines the original construc#on date as well as subsequent renova#on, however minimal. Photos presented here speak to the range of issues that exist on campus.

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The entrance to Del Valle High School has great curb appeal, with historic charm, clear signage, and nice landscaping The entry is easy to iden!fy and there is a secured front door. However, there is no ADA compliant entrance, and the second-story emergency exit stair detracts from the overall grand entrance.

The extensive hardcourts at the Del Valle campus, shown here are basketball and tennis courts.

The Del Valle bicycle repair classroom - an instruc!onal shop space that repairs old bikes and donates them to local chari!es and families in need.

Pictured above is a typical classroom at Del Valle. Overall this is a nice space, although improvements could be made in regard to technology and storage.

The generous mul!-purpose space that is only used by a dozen or so students. The campus oers free and reduced meals, but only has the ability to warm the prepared meals.

The current ramped access to the restrooms is not ADA compliant.

Del Valle High School 169


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