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Home Historic Hood River New School

Historic Hood River

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« Apple Pickers
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New School

9-20-2019
New School

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Notes

Thanks to HHR reader Kyle Ramey for this fine photo of Hood River’s newest school, the new May Street Elementary School. He took this photo on opening day, September 2, 2019, which is now history. It looks like there is still a little finishing work left to be done. The main athletic field are not yet constructed, as crews work to remove the debris from demolition of the “old” May Street Elementary School.

Does anyone wish to share any “first day of school” stories for posterity? They don’t need to be about this school…

Category: Downtown Hood River
Tags: 2010s, construction, May Street, May Street School, Ramey, school

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. L. E.

    20th September 2019 @ 10:14 AM

    Today's schools might not be as attractive as some of the old schools, but they are certainly more energy efficient.
    And they are much more attractive than the schools built in the 70's and 80's which looked like prisons with no windows. I can't imagine where that architectural idea came from.
    I also notice that many of the new schools have gone back to multi storied, which is much more land efficient.

  2. Roger Sheldrake

    20th September 2019 @ 10:19 AM

    I still have my solid oak chair which my parents had to supply at Coe Primary, 1952

  3. ArthurB

    20th September 2019 @ 12:14 PM

    L.E., if there are no windows the kids can't spend the classroom time staring out them, wishing they were outside.

  4. L. E.

    20th September 2019 @ 02:24 PM

    My dad said that is why he ran away from home. He was a farm boy, from a two room country school that went through the 8th grade. Then the farm kids had to go to the big town, and big high school. The one thing my dad was really interested in was shop class, but the administration said shop class was reserved for the city kids. Farm kids already knew how to work in a shop.
    Dad said he was sitting in class one day looking out the window at a robin sitting in the tree. He said the robin was more free and happy than he was. So he ran away from school and home.

    He eventually came back home, but not back to school.

  5. nels

    20th September 2019 @ 06:11 PM

    Daughter did the same thing – went to college on Sitka Island. Sitting in class watching the whales swimming by out in the ocean, and realized they were doing what they wanted to do. So she dropped out and got a job working at the South Pole.

  6. Kyle

    24th September 2019 @ 10:10 AM

    These newer designs (and frankly the old May Street design, which I loved) make me think about the European “Blue-Green” architectural guidelines. Buildings following these guidelines make it so that every permanent work space can see actual growing plants and real sunlight. They figured out that it leads to much less sick time and unhappiness at work…. in this case, fewer kids feeling like they’re trapped in a dungeon.

  7. Kyle

    25th September 2019 @ 08:39 AM

    For posterity's sake: A lot of the reason they weren't quite done with the exterior element of the new school when the students started had to do with surprises during demolition / construction. They found a large fuel oil tank buried by the old school that no one knew about (and it wasn't empty!), and then when they went to create ADA accessible curb cuts on the sidewalks, they found utilities buried too shallow to allow it without relocating them deeper. Always surprises, I guess, with these projects. But the students all tell me they're loving the new building.

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