As enrollment falls, old schools find new life as apartments [View all]
In a once-thriving neighborhood in the southeast part of Atlanta, Lakewood Elementary served families who came to work at the General Motors assembly plant, a sprawling 100-acre landmark that became a path toward economic mobility for entry-level workers. At its height in the late 1970s, the plant employed as many as 5,700 people.
But by the early 90s, when Gloria Hawkins-Wynn moved into the community, signs of decline were evident. The last Chevy Caprice rolled off the assembly line in 1990, and a popular antique market at the now-defunct Lakewood Fairgrounds shut down in 2006. The closure of the elementary school two years earlier further contributed to neighborhood blight, turning the abandoned structure into a hotspot for criminal activity.
We get prostitution. We get drug dealing. We get drive-by shootings, Hawkins-Wynn told a local news station four years ago. A neighborhood representative, she urged city leaders to turn the eyesore over to a developer.
Former students begged the city to save the school, home to some of their earliest memories: Dick and Jane books, dances in the auditorium, a principal named Mr. Hinkle. Still visible on the schools deserted playground is a faded map of the United States.
Please dont demolish it, wrote one woman. Walking to Lakewood with her mother, who died when she was 7, is a cherished memory.
Now the old school is one of several in Atlanta slated to become apartments. Its a transformation that is increasingly taking place across the country as city leaders and developers look to give new life to vacant buildings once bustling with students and teachers, The 74 reports.
https://www.wkow.com/news/as-enrollment-falls-old-schools-find-new-life-as-apartments/article_bfe03335-0a05-5274-9165-61a0a3a14c79.html
In Knoxville, TN, the old Knoxville HS became senior apartments. They are lovely. In Georgetown, KY, the former Catholic girls' school I lived in for the first half of my first travel nursing assignment fell victim to condo developers. Not so nice.