JOPLIN, Mo. —
Work has begun on those sites that will house new buildings within two years to replace Joplin schools that were destroyed in the 2011 tornado.
“I’m excited,” Superintendent C.J. Huff said Friday. “It’s nice to see some bigger projects, like Mercy (Hospital) and some of our schools, coming up out of the ground.”
Elementary school
Much of the rubble of St. John’s Regional Medical Center remains at the corner of 26th Street and McClelland Avenue, but farther south, on a 14-acre tract of the property across from Hometown Bank, crews are beginning to prepare for the construction of the new elementary building that will house students from Irving and Emerson elementary schools.
For now, most of the work is at ground level. The district has been trucking to the site loads of dirt that have been excavated from 50th Street and Hearnes Boulevard, where the new Mercy Hospital Joplin is being built.
Huff said activity will pick up soon.
“You’ll start seeing some movement over there in the very near future,” he said.
The design phase for the school has been completed, and bids for preliminary tasks — site preparation and laying the foundation, for example — have been awarded. The school will be built to house up to 600 students; an estimated 500 students currently attend Irving and Emerson, Huff said.
Mike Johnson, director of construction for the school district, said his staff has been working “behind the scenes” to get contractors lined up for the building.
“We’re gearing up for full construction mode there, and you’ll see that start to take off there next week,” he said.
Middle school
The site for the new East Middle School, and an elementary school that will house students from Duenweg and Duquesne schools, is the most visibly busy.
“It’s the furthest along right now,” Huff said. “I expect in the next couple of weeks, we’ll see some steel going up.”
Ground at the site on East 20th Street has been leveled, and construction crews are working to pour the foundation, he said. Some materials, such as steel, have already been ordered.
Johnson said: “Over the next weeks, you’ll see things actually coming up out of the ground. It’ll be the first one to show.”
The building will hold up to 450 elementary-aged schoolchildren and up to 700 middle-school students. It will be two separate schools but a few parts, such as a kitchen, will serve both sets of students.
High school
Just southwest of where Joplin High School once stood at 20th Street and Indiana Avenue, construction crews last week were installing a stormwater drainage system and moving utilities. They are also working to bring the site up to grade and preparing to pour a foundation, Huff said.
“I can’t help but imagine you’re going to see a lot more work going on in the next two weeks,” he said.
The new high school, with a capacity of 3,000 students, will be built as a series of five interconnected “houses,” with each “house” containing classes geared toward a different career path, such as business or health and sciences. It will include an auditorium, gymnasium, sports fields and more parking than was available at the old high school; Franklin Technology Center also will be integrated with the high school, rather than being a free-standing building as it was before the storm.
Huff said construction will begin on the southern end of the property and work its way northward. Bid packages for several structural aspects of the new building, including steel and concrete work for the footings and foundation, are expected to go out as early as this week, he said.
Johnson said he expects to have a full set of design documents for the school by early November, at which time he anticipates the remaining components to be put out for bid.
The elementary school and middle/elementary school are projected to open in December 2013; the high school and Franklin Technology Center are projected to open by August 2014. Johnson said the district’s goal in setting those timelines was to get students back into permanent schools as quickly as possible.
“It’s a very challenging, aggressive schedule,” he said. “But we’ve developed a schedule to meet that aggressive goal, and so far, we’re tracking that schedule.”
Funding
The new Joplin schools are being built with a combination of insurance proceeds, government funding and donations, as well as a $62 million bond issue that voters approved in April. The estimated cost of the rebuilding effort, which also includes adding safe rooms to most schools and other improvements, is about $185 million.
May 2011 Joplin tornado
Joplin School District preps sites for rebuilding schools destroyed by tornado
- May 2011 Joplin tornado
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Illinois youth group arrives in Joplin to assemble house
Break time was approaching, but Keith Duncan wanted to make one last concentrated push in order to get the large Penske truck unloaded. “Two minutes, people! Two minutes!” he yelled as the students and adults hauling large wooden sections out of the truck began picking up the pace.
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SLIDESHOW: One year later, One day of unity, updated
Photos from a day of events commemorating the May 22, 2011 tornado anniversary
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Last of 586 FEMA trailers in Joplin to be prepared for move
For 19 months, rows of nearly 600 units spread out among community and commercial sites were a visual reminder of the homes lost in Joplin on May 22, 2011. One by one, contractors began disassembling and moving the trailers, a testament to their occupants having found places to live.
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Civil engineers release study of Joplin tornado damage
It did not take much wind to flatten houses in the Joplin tornado zone because so many were poorly constructed to withstand wind, according to a study released recently by the American Society of Civil Engineers.
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Rescuers, tornado victims reunite at Quapaw station
There were lots of hugs exchanged, pictures taken and memories summoned when fire crews on Friday met the two youngsters they pulled, critically injured, from the wreckage of Joplin’s 2011 tornado.
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Quapaw tribe’s firefighters, EMS personnel meet with children rescued at Home Depot in 2011
There were hugs, stories and the occasional tear this morning when two children who were trapped and seriously injured after the 2011 Joplin tornado met for the first time the Quapaw Tribe firefighters and emergency medical workers who pulled them from the wreckage and saved their lives that night.
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New members take seats on redevelopment board
Three new members took their places on the board of the Joplin Redevelopment Corp. in a meeting Thursday. The panel welcomed as new members Laurie Delano, vice president of finance for Empire District Electric Co.; Gary Duncan, retired president and chief executive of Freeman Health System; and Phil Stinnett, a former Joplin council member and mayor.
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Tornado grant trustees look to shelter placement
Trustees overseeing a Joplin tornado fund hope to use some of their remaining money to move FEMA-financed tornado shelters to areas where they are needed.
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Documentary about Joplin Globe coverage of tornado wins 2013 Mirror Award
The documentary “Deadline in Disaster” has won a 2013 Mirror Award in the “Best Single Story” category.
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Oklahoma photo collection to begin with ‘Picture Patrol’
A new national photo rescue operation based in Carthage that formed to help salvage and return to owners what was lost in the Joplin tornado has reached out to Moore, Okla., and next week will help storm victims there get down to business.
- More May 2011 Joplin tornado Headlines
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