Lionakis Architects Archives - School Construction News https://schoolconstructionnews.com Design - Construction - Operations Thu, 31 Oct 2019 23:34:03 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.7.11 California School Renovation Celebrates Diversity https://schoolconstructionnews.com/2019/10/30/california-school-renovation-celebrates-diversity/ Wed, 30 Oct 2019 15:33:27 +0000 http://schoolconstructionnews.com/?p=47596 A new K-8 school was unveiled recently in the Arden Arcade area of Sacramento—Dyer-Kelly, the first elementary school to be built in the San Juan Unified School District since 1992.

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By Lisa Kopochinski

SACRAMENTO, Calif. —A new K-5 school was unveiled recently in the Arden Arcade area of Sacramento—Dyer-Kelly, the first elementary school to be built in the San Juan Unified School District since 1992.

The new $50 million facility—a two-story building with an amphitheater—replaced the former 70-year-old school that was falling apart. The district paid for the project with community-approved bonds.

Lionakis was the architect on this impressive project, and Clark/Sullivan Construction served as general contractor. Design plans began in 2017, and construction took a little more than a year.

“Dyer-Kelly has been a real opportunity to be part of a project that is making a difference in an underserved part of our community,” said Lionakis Project Principal Laura Knauss.

“A true source of community pride, the site is providing a safe and secure hub for this neighborhood and elevating the student perception of what a school should be.”

Dyer-Kelly is a Title 1 school that serves three meals a day and provides basic necessities like socks to its students. Located in a diverse neighborhood, in the 2016-17 school year, nearly 400 of its 445 students were refugees, according to the Sacramento Bee.

Former Dyer-Kelly Principal Cassandra Bennett Porter told the Sacramento Bee that when the new campus was being built, officials kept that in mind. As a result, the school has seven wings, each labeled with a different continent and color scheme.

“We wanted to highlight the diverse community that attends this school,” said San Juan Assistant Superintendent of Facilities Frank Camarda in a statement. “People are coming from all over the world.”

A welcome wall is situated near the front of the school with greetings in various languages. Additionally, the blue wing of the new facility represents Europe; the orange is Africa; the red wing is Asia; green represents North America; while fuchsia represents South America. Australia is represented by yellow and turquoise is Antarctica.

The exterior the new school closely resembles a college. The tall horizontal building has the school’s and district’s name in gray metal letters across the top.

Inside the sleek campus, there is a large open space with gray tables. Directly upstairs, there are swiveling chairs, a library twice the size of the previous one, and a multipurpose room where students can eat and mingle.

“Schools really have the potential to really lift a community,” said Principal Gianfranco Tornatore.

“We have experienced teachers who are extremely hardworking and relentless in serving our community. We have students and families who are extremely dedicated. And so, this new building is only going to enhance that.”

 

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Groundbreaking Held for Hawaiian Elementary School https://schoolconstructionnews.com/2019/10/24/groundbreaking-held-for-hawaiian-elementary-school/ Thu, 24 Oct 2019 14:42:56 +0000 http://schoolconstructionnews.com/?p=47572 A groundbreaking of the highly anticipated Honowai Elementary School was recently held in Waipahu.

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By SCN Staff

WAIPAHU, Hawaii—A groundbreaking of the highly anticipated Honowai Elementary School was recently held in Waipahu.

Lionakis Architects along with S&M Sakamoto, the general contractor on the project, and officials from the State of Hawaii and Department of Education (DOE) celebrated the event with golden shovels in tow.

 The ceremony first opened up with Kent Matsumara, the school principal, giving opening remarks and thanking the legislators, DOE officials, Lionakis and S&M Sakamoto Inc.

Kahu “Uncle” Bruce and his students then performed a traditional blessing. Those with golden shovels mixed in salt with the soil as a symbol of mixing in their spirit and hard work into the ground and then shared a few inspiring words of what this project has meant to them.

This $12 million project, which is being built on sacred lands, was widely acknowledged by all. The efforts and knowledge pouring into the project from the entire community truly reflect that understanding.

The project sits on sacred lands including approximately six acres, adjacent to a community park. The elementary school consists of a multi-phased transformation of the existing campus to prepare it for 21st-century programs and educational delivery while embracing sustainable design strategies. A new, three-story classroom building will serve the Medically Fragile and Special Education Programs, and also includes Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) lab spaces. Additionally, renovations to the existing buildings will address critical core facility deficiencies.

The campus’ architecture and the school mascot of Na Ali’i (The Chiefs) are reflective in the design and Ali’i (Chief or Royalty) was the inspiration. The capes of the Chiefs—Ahu‘ula—serve as the main design theme. Its graphic patterns and colors (specifically yellow and red) represent hierarchy within the Ali’i ruling class and their families. Ahu’ula personifies protection, as it embraces the school and seeks to ensure the sustenance, existence and growth of its students on their paths to success.

Completion is slated for July 2020.

 

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