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A school of their own
Sulphur High School 9th Grade Campus follows national trend
By Sam Barnes
After years of planning and design, an $11 million 9th Grade
Campus will open next to Sulphur High School this summer.
Calcasieu Parish School Board members hope the 750-student,
two-building school will create an environment more conducive
to learning.
School Board member Joe Andrepont said the board hopes to
raise educational standards by isolating the 9th graders from
older high school students.
"Drop-out rates at other 9th grade campuses have declined
from 9 percent to 1 percent," Andrepont said. "Separating
them from the upperclassmen should lead to an improved educational
experience."
The Sulphur area has been supportive of the project, overwhelmingly
passing a $14.5 million property tax package in October 2001.
"We're a close community here and education is very
important to us," Andrepont added. "We have three
elementary schools and they all feed Sulphur High School,
so it's not difficult to get support when we all have a stake."
Alfred Palma Inc. of Lake Charles plans to complete the
school in time for the next school year. The contractor is
building a two-story classroom and administration building,
as well as a single-story building with gymnasiums, locker
rooms, band/choral room and cafeteria.
Project manager Brad Evans said two months of rain delays
plagued the jobsite after breaking ground in December 2002.
"But school officials were looking forward to having
this school open by fall 2004," he added. "We had
already finished five projects at Sulphur High School over
the last 10 years and we had developed a relationship with
the people here, so we told them we would do everything we
could to finish the job on time."
School board members and architects Ray Fugatt and Randall
Broussard meet weekly with the contractor to keep abreast
of the school's progress.
To accomplish the stringent deadline, Alfred Palma supervisors
modified the schedule to focus more on the classroom building
and less on the gymnasium.
"The classroom building had to be finished for school
to open; the gymnasium could wait a couple of months,"
Evans said.
No matter what schedule was followed, the contractor still
had to get the building out of the ground during the winter
months, which involved "fairly extensive site work consisting
of 7,700 cu. yds. of excavation and the hauling of about 10,600
cu. yds. of new fill to raise the building pad."
No demolition was required because the site had been used
previously as a practice field for sports and band.
"The site was actually a rodeo arena about 20 years
ago," Evans added.
More than 300 drilled shafts were built as foundation by
Foundation Drilled Shafts of Sulphur, ranging from 18 to 36
in. diameter and 8 to 30 ft. in depth.
The larger shafts were necessary beneath several large columns
that support the gymnasium's steel trusses.
"Six of the gym trusses reach 119 ft. and were lifted
in one piece," Evans said. Four of the trusses were needed
to support the main gymnasium roof, while the remaining two
were used for a smaller, adjacent gym. Each truss weighs about
12,000 lbs.
All of the trusses were fabricated by Jerry's Machine and
Fabrication of Lake Charles and erected with a hydraulic crane
by Alfred Palma last fall. Robbins Contracting of Moss Bluff
erected some light-gauge roof trusses.
A 5-in.-thick slab was placed throughout both buildings
with 3,000 psi concrete supplied by Dunham Price of Lake Charles
and pumped by Star Concrete Pumpers, both of Lake Charles.
A 4-in.-thick second floor slab was placed for the two-story
classroom/administration building.
Exterior paving required an additional 700 cu. yds. of 4,000
psi concrete, with a total of 3,700 cu. yds. of concrete required
for the entire project.
A significant amount of steel provides the framework for
both buildings, requiring about 330 tons of structural steel
and about 70 tons of bar joists.
"One of the more unique aspects of the buildings is
the use of 'Ziprip' roofing," Evans said. The roof system
is being "roll formed" onsite because the specified
roof panels were too large to ship from the factory in New
Jersey, often reaching 125 ft. in length.
"Designers wanted to reduce the number of splices and
subsequently reduce the likelihood of roof leaks," he
added.
A roll-former was transported from New Jersey to Louisiana
so all panels that exceeded 60 ft. could be rolled on site.
Upon completion, the new blue-tinted roof will consist of
99,000 sq. ft. of panels.
Other work at the site requires the placement of concrete-filled
block for the interior gymnasium walls, acoustical roof decking
over the gymnasiums and drywall for the interior classroom
building walls. The contractor is installing a stucco, brick
and glass exterior for both buildings.
The main entrance to the building will have an atrium that
extends upward through the second floor, with windows installed
at the top to allow natural light to filter into the space.
"Inside the lobby, there's going to an 8-ft.-wide by
10-ft.-tall brick sculpture that will feature the school crest,"
said architect Fugatt. A sculptor, Paula Collins in Texas,
is working through Acme Brick Co. to design and create the
bricks for the sculpture. She'll supervise the installation
in March or April."
Fugatt said a courtyard space is being constructed between
the two buildings, including a paved plaza with landscaping
and ornamental iron fencing.
Another aesthetic feature is a popup steel canopy that will
allow natural lighting to filter into a covered area connecting
the two buildings.
Once opened this summer, students at the 9th Grade Campus
will use some of the existing high school facilities, including
an agriculture department building, auditorium and athletic
complex.
Evans said school construction provides a unique set of
requirements unlike other building projects.
"You have a given budget and a given program of needs
to address in that building," he added. "In addition
to that you want to make a nice space for the children to
learn."
Useful Resources
For updates on the progress of the new campus, go to: http://www.cpsb.org/
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