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A new George Wythe High School will cost a record show

By Jeremy Lazarus

The cost of replacing George Wythe High School has ballooned to $154.6 million, far more than anticipated.

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Chesapeake-based RRMM Architects, which is handling the design work, recently provided that estimate to the School Board and Mayor Levar M. Stoney in updating the development of the building that is projected to have room for 1,800 students and bear a new name.

The cost of the new school, data from the Virginia Department of Education show, is on track to be a record for the state in per cost per square foot or cost per student.

to develop that building.

Rev. Harris

Feb. 2 at 6 p.m. – “The Hero from Hopewell: The Rev. Curtis W. Harris and the Civil Rights Movement.” Just three months before Curtis Harris was born, the Virginia State Legislature passed the Racial Integrity Act, which banned interracial marriage down to “a single drop” of African blood. His inspirational story follows him from Dendron to Hopewell and then to the forefront of America’s civil rights battles, arm in arm with the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. This lecture will be a virtual event. The lecture will be recorded and streamed on YouTube and Facebook.

Feb. 16 at noon – “ Dismal

Freedom.” in March is to include authorization for Richmond Public Schools to borrow $200 million for construction of new schools, part of the $800 million that the city has pledged to provide for new school buildings through 2040. The past two capital budgets that the council has approved shows the $200 million as being made available during the upcoming fiscal year that will start July 1.

Based on RRMM data, the new high school would cost $86,111 per each of the students and $543 per square foot.

The School Board had hoped to keep the total cost around $116 million for the new building in retaking control of building construction two years ago, a move that created a significant conflict with Mayor Stoney’s administration and City Council.

Fourth District School Board member

Join Brent Morris for a lecture examining the lives of the maroons living in the Great Dismal Swamp and their struggles for liberation. Tickets are required for in-person admission. Tickets are not needed if you would prefer to view the lecture live on YouTube or Facebook. In-person attendees are invited to meet the author at the book signing immediately following the lecture.

Mr. Morris

At the time, the mayor’s team led by Robert Steidel, deputy chief administrative officer for operations, estimated the cost of the new school building would run $140 million, a figure that was received with skepticism from School Board members at the time but which now appears to have been on target.

The city has made sure the funding will be available. The 2023-24 capital budget that the City Council is to receive

Jonathan Young, a leader in pushing for School Board control of construction, acknowledged that the RRMM price tag for the new high school came as a surprise.

The cost is about 50 percent more than Henrico County paid to build the new Tucker and Varina high schools, which opened in the fall of 2021. Those schools cost nearly $100 million each.

And if the numbers prove correct, the total would be double the cost of the current Huguenot High School, which opened in 2016. The city spent about $75 million

Mr. Young said the cost of the new high school would reduce the money available for other needed building projects, such as redeveloping a former tobacco factory in South Side into a career and vocational high school. According to RRMM, the design of the new high school is nearly complete. Expectations are for RPS to submit permit requests to the city by May 15 and to post requests for a contractor to build by Aug. 1.

The goal, according to RRMM and RPS, is to award the contract and give the selected team notice to proceed by Nov. 1.

The RRMM timeline surprisingly indicates that it could take three years to prepare the new site and build the new high school, with completion anticipated by Nov. 1, 2026. Demolition of the existing building and construction of new athletic fields on that site are anticipated to take an additional year, according RRMM.

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