Date: Fri 27-Aug-1999
Date: Fri 27-Aug-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: JEFF
Quick Words:
school-Cochran-House-Becker
Full Text:
School Bd Explores The Cochran House Option
(with photos)
BY JEFF WHITE
On Monday, August 23, Becker & Becker Associates (B&B), one of the developers
vying for Fairfield Hills, hosted a tour of Cochran House for Newtown school
officials, in an effort for all to promote the possibility of turning the
building into a school for grades five and six.
For Board of Education member Earl Gordon, it was the first time through the
43-year-old building. "It's an interesting proposition," said Mr Gordon about
B&B's planned 5/6 school, "although I think that it is a little difficult to
visualize what the end product will look like."
The tour commenced in Cochran's chapel, the site were B&B proposes to house a
media center that will be at the heart of the new school. From there, the
group preceded through several would-be classrooms, the potential site of the
gymnasium, and down to the ground floor where B&B plans a cafeteria and music
classrooms.
Diane Sherlock, the new middle school principal, has had experience as an
administrator at a 5/6 school in Michigan, and was encouraged with what she
saw during the walk through.
"Overall, I was favorably impressed," Mrs Sherlock said. "I thought that the
building was a really sturdy structure, I thought that the plan to adapt the
space was perfect.
"I think [B&B] really understands what the needs of kids are and plugged them
into their plan. They did a really good job of understanding the needs of a
school," she added.
B&B's Proposed 5/6 School
According to B&B's proposal, two major additions will be made to the existing
Cochran structure. The first addition would jut out from the west face of the
building and house a media center on the first floor, along with a music and
art area on the ground floor.
The second addition would be on the south side of the building, with a
gymnasium on the first floor, and a cafeteria on the ground floor. Students
would have the ability to enter both the cafeteria and the gymnasium from the
ground level.
During the tour, Superintendent of Schools John Reed pointed out that the "H"
shape of Cochran House lent itself ideally to separating classes.
B&B's 5/6 school will consist of two academic wings, or what they call
"houses." In "House A," the first floor will hold ten classrooms, as will the
second floor. This setup will be matched in "House B," for a total of 40
classrooms between the two academic wings.
The two academic wings will create two smaller schools within a larger school.
The plan is for each wing to be mixed with students from grades five and six,
with students staying in their particular academic house during both years.
According to B&B President Bruce Becker, this will give each student the
experience of going to a small school within a large school.
The first floor would also house various administrative and guidance offices
and a nurses clinic.
The second floor would be reserved as the science floor, with classrooms and
laboratories along the corridors.
B&B has designed a large bus loop that will front the school, with the
capability of accommodating up to 25 buses. They outlined a separate parent
drop-off loop on the west side of the building.
B&B has proposed to build four additional multi-purpose athletic fields to the
north of the existing baseball fields.
Favorable Reactions
"What they presented seemed to be some exciting possibilities," said Head
O'Meadow School Principal William Bircher. "What I can say is that from what I
heard, it is certainly something that is worth considering."
It was Mr Bircher's first walk-through, and for the most part, he said he
could not find any problems that B&B did not seem to address.
Indeed, many school officials have recognized various alterations B&B have
made to their initial 5/6 school plans to take into account problems that had
been brought the company's attention.
Board of Education Chairperson Amy Dent, who has previously walked through the
building, said that B&B had addressed undersized classrooms, the location of
special education within the school, and the idea of making the gymnasium into
a gym/auditorium.
"We discussed how the corridors of the building would be moved from the center
to the side of each wing, so that we had natural light in the corridor and
have classrooms of desired proportion," said Mr Becker.
Mrs Dent called the proposed 5/6 school "a more viable option than we had
originally anticipated."
" As far as I'm concerned, it's very feasible to have a school at Cochran
House," said Buildings and Grounds Supervisor Dominick Posca, who has been
through the building five times now. "I like Cochran House. I think it will
make an ideal school structure. Everything can be worked within that
structure."
Still, school officials said they will wait for a decision from the town,
though Earl Gordon feels that the Board of Education will have some say in the
decision. "If this becomes a truly serious option, I think there will have to
be more investigation made by the board about the Watertown Hall option," he
said, referring to another potential site that the board has considered for a
5/6 school.
The tour has left Bruce Becker encouraged, however.
"I was very pleased by the positive reception from the elementary school
principals and the Board of Education," Mr Becker said. "I think everyone was
able to recognize the potential, though it required some amount of vision."
Mr Becker viewed his school proposal as a partnership with Newtown, so B&B
could provide a more cost effective option rather than building a school from
scratch.
As far as how a new school would be paid for, Mr Becker said that a variety of
options could be exercised, from B&B operating the 5/6 school on a turn-key
basis, leasing the school to the town, or selling it to the town outright.
For Amy Dent, the B&B option might be the most sound way of getting a 5/6
school constructed in the time frame that the Board of Education thinks will
be necessary to address swelling student populations.
The fall of 2001 goal for a new school "can't happen with new construction,"
Mrs Dent said.
"It's a very complicated puzzle, and this is just one piece," Mrs Dent said of
B&B's 5/6 school. "It cannot be solved in a vacuum."