Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:School will need 200+ million dollars of renovations if it is made into a traditional HS. No way that gets done in less than a year. Part of the reason you are starting to hear about magnet options is that it would allow them to open the school on a small scale and fulfill their promise to open in 2026.
I’ve heard from 4 people who have toured the school and all say if it’s made a traditional school they will need 2 full years to renovate and make additions to athletics facilities.
Lady, you can have a high school without a football field. Especially if it's only two grades the first year.
DP. That’s a non sequitur. If it’s two grades at first, they might just have a JV team initially but they’ll be some parents who’ll absolutely throw a fit if the school doesn’t have a stadium with lights, bleachers, goal posts, etc.
Once more: I remember going to games at neutral fields because a school was either building or renovating their stadium. It may have been for a Spring sport. They use a field that is not being used that night.
People will not throw a fit. Believe me. And, they will fundraise for it. One thing people support is sports.
Where was this? I’d be very surprised if it was an FCPS high school.
In Fairfax County a few years ago.
Yeah, no, that didn’t happen, unless you’re just talking about a temporary renovation of an existing stadium/turf field. That’s different than telling people at a traditional HS their school is opening without a fully functioning stadium.
I’m not saying, by the way, that KAA shouldn’t be a traditional HS, only that people are right to identify what KAA may be lacking and figure out what the implications are in terms of costs, timing, etc.
Oh you know EVERYTHING THAT HAS EVER HAPPENED IN THIS GIANT COUNTY? No you don't. Shut up you sound so incredibly stupid. JUST GO AWAY TROLL
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:School will need 200+ million dollars of renovations if it is made into a traditional HS. No way that gets done in less than a year. Part of the reason you are starting to hear about magnet options is that it would allow them to open the school on a small scale and fulfill their promise to open in 2026.
I’ve heard from 4 people who have toured the school and all say if it’s made a traditional school they will need 2 full years to renovate and make additions to athletics facilities.
Lady, you can have a high school without a football field. Especially if it's only two grades the first year.
DP. That’s a non sequitur. If it’s two grades at first, they might just have a JV team initially but they’ll be some parents who’ll absolutely throw a fit if the school doesn’t have a stadium with lights, bleachers, goal posts, etc.
Once more: I remember going to games at neutral fields because a school was either building or renovating their stadium. It may have been for a Spring sport. They use a field that is not being used that night.
People will not throw a fit. Believe me. And, they will fundraise for it. One thing people support is sports.
Where was this? I’d be very surprised if it was an FCPS high school.
In Fairfax County a few years ago.
Yeah, no, that didn’t happen, unless you’re just talking about a temporary renovation of an existing stadium/turf field. That’s different than telling people at a traditional HS their school is opening without a fully functioning stadium.
I’m not saying, by the way, that KAA shouldn’t be a traditional HS, only that people are right to identify what KAA may be lacking and figure out what the implications are in terms of costs, timing, etc.
Anonymous wrote:The building was built to have males and females on separate ends of the school. That alone will take some renovations to undue.
Anonymous wrote:Also do the athletic facilities have lights? Are there multiple fields available for practice after school?
Anonymous wrote:Is there parking and if not would there be enough outdoor space left after building a large enough parking lot to accommodate the needs of a HS? If all these things need to happen it is unlikely that could get designed, permitted, and built in 10 months considering they don’t even know what they want the school to be yet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:School will need 200+ million dollars of renovations if it is made into a traditional HS. No way that gets done in less than a year. Part of the reason you are starting to hear about magnet options is that it would allow them to open the school on a small scale and fulfill their promise to open in 2026.
I’ve heard from 4 people who have toured the school and all say if it’s made a traditional school they will need 2 full years to renovate and make additions to athletics facilities.
Lady, you can have a high school without a football field. Especially if it's only two grades the first year.
DP. That’s a non sequitur. If it’s two grades at first, they might just have a JV team initially but they’ll be some parents who’ll absolutely throw a fit if the school doesn’t have a stadium with lights, bleachers, goal posts, etc.
Once more: I remember going to games at neutral fields because a school was either building or renovating their stadium. It may have been for a Spring sport. They use a field that is not being used that night.
People will not throw a fit. Believe me. And, they will fundraise for it. One thing people support is sports.
Where was this? I’d be very surprised if it was an FCPS high school.
Well, I asked google:
No, Westfield High School in Chantilly, VA, did not have a stadium when it opened; the school's football field with bleachers and a stadium were built and added after the school opened, with the main stadium construction happening years later.
Details
Westfield High School opened its doors in 1995.
The athletic fields, including the football field, were in place when the school opened.
However, the permanent stadium with extensive seating and facilities came later, with the main stadium construction and improvements taking place in the late 1990s and early 2000s.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:School will need 200+ million dollars of renovations if it is made into a traditional HS. No way that gets done in less than a year. Part of the reason you are starting to hear about magnet options is that it would allow them to open the school on a small scale and fulfill their promise to open in 2026.
I’ve heard from 4 people who have toured the school and all say if it’s made a traditional school they will need 2 full years to renovate and make additions to athletics facilities.
Lady, you can have a high school without a football field. Especially if it's only two grades the first year.
DP. That’s a non sequitur. If it’s two grades at first, they might just have a JV team initially but they’ll be some parents who’ll absolutely throw a fit if the school doesn’t have a stadium with lights, bleachers, goal posts, etc.
Once more: I remember going to games at neutral fields because a school was either building or renovating their stadium. It may have been for a Spring sport. They use a field that is not being used that night.
People will not throw a fit. Believe me. And, they will fundraise for it. One thing people support is sports.
Where was this? I’d be very surprised if it was an FCPS high school.
In Fairfax County a few years ago.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:School will need 200+ million dollars of renovations if it is made into a traditional HS. No way that gets done in less than a year. Part of the reason you are starting to hear about magnet options is that it would allow them to open the school on a small scale and fulfill their promise to open in 2026.
I’ve heard from 4 people who have toured the school and all say if it’s made a traditional school they will need 2 full years to renovate and make additions to athletics facilities.
Lady, you can have a high school without a football field. Especially if it's only two grades the first year.
DP. That’s a non sequitur. If it’s two grades at first, they might just have a JV team initially but they’ll be some parents who’ll absolutely throw a fit if the school doesn’t have a stadium with lights, bleachers, goal posts, etc.
Once more: I remember going to games at neutral fields because a school was either building or renovating their stadium. It may have been for a Spring sport. They use a field that is not being used that night.
People will not throw a fit. Believe me. And, they will fundraise for it. One thing people support is sports.
Where was this? I’d be very surprised if it was an FCPS high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another fun thing that came out of today's meeting was that Reid had no idea whether Route 1 is in eastern or northern Fairfax. She's supposed to be overseeing a boundary study but apparently still has no idea where some of the major arteries in the county are located.
I mean, I don't know this either and I've lived in Fairfax County for 15 years!
Does your job require you to be familiar with the county as a whole? If so, do you make more or less than half a million a year?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:School will need 200+ million dollars of renovations if it is made into a traditional HS. No way that gets done in less than a year. Part of the reason you are starting to hear about magnet options is that it would allow them to open the school on a small scale and fulfill their promise to open in 2026.
I’ve heard from 4 people who have toured the school and all say if it’s made a traditional school they will need 2 full years to renovate and make additions to athletics facilities.
Lady, you can have a high school without a football field. Especially if it's only two grades the first year.
DP. That’s a non sequitur. If it’s two grades at first, they might just have a JV team initially but they’ll be some parents who’ll absolutely throw a fit if the school doesn’t have a stadium with lights, bleachers, goal posts, etc.
Once more: I remember going to games at neutral fields because a school was either building or renovating their stadium. It may have been for a Spring sport. They use a field that is not being used that night.
People will not throw a fit. Believe me. And, they will fundraise for it. One thing people support is sports.
Where was this? I’d be very surprised if it was an FCPS high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another fun thing that came out of today's meeting was that Reid had no idea whether Route 1 is in eastern or northern Fairfax. She's supposed to be overseeing a boundary study but apparently still has no idea where some of the major arteries in the county are located.
I mean, I don't know this either and I've lived in Fairfax County for 15 years!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:School will need 200+ million dollars of renovations if it is made into a traditional HS. No way that gets done in less than a year. Part of the reason you are starting to hear about magnet options is that it would allow them to open the school on a small scale and fulfill their promise to open in 2026.
I’ve heard from 4 people who have toured the school and all say if it’s made a traditional school they will need 2 full years to renovate and make additions to athletics facilities.
Lady, you can have a high school without a football field. Especially if it's only two grades the first year.
DP. That’s a non sequitur. If it’s two grades at first, they might just have a JV team initially but they’ll be some parents who’ll absolutely throw a fit if the school doesn’t have a stadium with lights, bleachers, goal posts, etc.
Once more: I remember going to games at neutral fields because a school was either building or renovating their stadium. It may have been for a Spring sport. They use a field that is not being used that night.
People will not throw a fit. Believe me. And, they will fundraise for it. One thing people support is sports.