The GDS proposal is super greedy, super inappropriate for the site and way too dense and high. It should be and, as currently proposed, will be, vigorously opposed by the surrounding community. |
[quote=Anonymous]The GDS proposal is super greedy, super inappropriate for the site and way too dense and high. It should be and, as currently proposed, will be, vigorously opposed by the surrounding community.[/quote]
NIMBY haters gonna hate. |
Open campus? That may change during the approval process. |
Why stop at private schools? Why not include private businesses? If you don't personally shop there, close it down! And everything else should be owned by the government! |
There must be some GDS-affiliated developers associated with this plan, but I still can't see how the trustees can approve it with so much expense for little/no extra space. |
I agree. The neighbors will probably insist on this. The days of wandering teens will be over for GDS. The culture of the school will definitely change. |
GDS has said the MacArthur campus is likely to remain a school (leased or sold). Given the substantial investment in facilities, the property is worth more as a school than as a tear down for residential development. This project will not grow the endowment -- at best, sale of the MacArthur campus will cover the cost of the land acquisitions in Tenleytown. Construction costs for the new L/MS facilities will come from donations -- some of which might otherwise have gone to build the endowment. And GDS won't own the dense mixed-use buildings on Wisconsin Ave. It'll get a revenue stream from leasing that land and plans to use those funds to limit tuition increases and add to financial aid. Again, not endowment. |
And parents will probably welcome that change. |
Why would GDS parents welcome a closed campus? They chose the school knowing the policy. They may have even chosen it because of that openness and culture. |
It sounds better on paper than it functions in reality. |
Yes, as an urbanite, I've always dreamed of dropping my PreKer off for school in a parking garage. And why should an urban school devote valuable real estate to playgrounds, athletic fields, and other educational facilities when it could lease its land to a developer instead? Seriously, while I could imagine a land-rich cash-strapped school feeling compelled to sell off some of its property to keep the school afloat, that's not the story here. GDS just paid $11.7 million to acquire to the Martens site and their plan is to hit up their donor base for tens of millions more to rebuild facilities they already have at MacArthur. |
Look at the architects, builders etc involved. You will have your answer. |
And seriously ... an open campus so that kids can interact with the city?? More like suburban Tenleytown. It's not like the school is on Capitol Hill and they can wander over to the Library of Congress at lunch. |
Sidwell Friends upper school has drop off in their garage. What about it? Many GDS parents will appreciate the convenience of having their children at one, consolidated campus. This is a win-win. |
And others chose GDS precisely because it had two campuses. Unless GDS has polled its families, no one knows which model is preferred. GDS parents I know felt blind-sided by the consolidated campus plan and have had very mixed reactions as to whether it's a good thing.
Longer-term, the question is whether people looking at DC privates will see GDS as more or less appealing post-transformation. Hard to see how more kids in less space is a step in the right direction. |