Theater could be costly for Boyle schools
Published 11:54 pm Monday, February 13, 2017
Discussion continued about the fate of the theater in the future Boyle County Middle School during Monday night’s working session of the Boyle County Board of Education.
Superintendent Mike LaFavers told board members that the Local Planning Committee will need to be reconvened soon so that the District Facilities Plan can be reworked to take the theater off of the high school, where it is currently listed on the plan.
Beyond that, the theater project may have to be separated from the middle school on paper, submitting it on its own to the Kentucky Department of Education, as the state standards for middle schools do not include theaters.
Tony Thomas, architect with Klotfelter Samokar, said it might be possible to bid the projects together.
“That piece we don’t know yet, because KDE hasn’t said yet if they are going to let us bid it as one,” said LaFavers. Thomas said he thought they would allow that.
“It was a very simple thing. It’s becoming a very complicated thing. We’re trying to manage through a very complicated thing so that in the end the district gets everything they’re shooting for,” LaFavers said. “We’ve got to be really smart about how we handle this thing.”
However, waiting to bid the projects together could delay everything beyond the December opening dates previously hoped for, LaFavers said.
“The 105,000 square foot middle school could be done by December,” Thomas said.
Thomas gave estimated numbers to complete the projects, which he said were likely on the high side. Just building the middle school could cost about $25.8 million; the middle school with the “community” theater, which would include fly lofts, would be about $37.3 million; the middle school with the medium level theatre would be about $33.7 million; and the middle school with the lowest level of theater, which officials say would still be a nice theatre capable of small productions, would be an estimated $31.07 million.
“The community theatre might not be possible,” said LaFavers. “Right now, as things are positioned, I’d say it’s a likelihood we could pull (the middle one) off.”
“I think the $37.3 million is more of a pipe dream,” said board member Jesse Johnson. “I just don’t want it incomplete.”
Thomas said the theater is currently listed as an alternate on the plan, with intention to continue working on it once the board decides what they are comfortable with building. There are two or three designs of the theater in the beginning stages, he said, waiting on future directions.
“We are moving forward with the rest of the building,” Thomas said.
LaFavers said the district should have the idea for the theater ready by the March working session.
Thompson also said that Klotfelter Samokar is working on the design development in many spaces, but none are ready to present as 100 percent finished. Approving those will be the next step.
The board gave verbal agreement to Thomas swap one Spanish classroom with the FMD room in the new design, placing the two Spanish classrooms beside each other, with a possible folding wall, to allow for collaboration.
Follow Kendra Peek on Twitter, @knpeek.