California-based Design Firm LPA Inc. received two CASH Awards for their design work at South Tahoe High School, in South Lake Tahoe, Calif., and Newport Harbor High School, in Newport Beach, Calif.
For Lake Tahoe Unified School District, LPA put together a District Facilities Master Plan – followed by the design of four different buildings. First to be completed, was the $12.5 million Career Technical Education (CTE) “Green” Construction and Transportation Academy. Second, was a $12 million Overcrowded Relief Grant (ORG) funded classroom building. To be finished in September, the $13 million Tahoe Arts and Design Academy. And lastly, a new Campus Commons Student Union and Sports Medicine Academy – to be up and running in 2012 and 2013, respectively.
“[The work at South Tahoe High School] is a very effective use of multiple funding sources and a very good conceptual use of career-tech education money … The design is protective of the Tahoe environment, which is an area that’s difficult to build in,” said the Jury Panel. “[Designers] made an interesting use of landscapes, and the shop spaces are incredible.”
The facilities at South Tahoe High School provide the kind of secondary education opportunities the jury noted, they would like to see more of. “Not only are the programmatic elements there, but it really speaks to career trajectories for young people. It’s just beautiful and really stunning,” says a Juror.
For Newport-Mesa Unified School District, LPA assisted with renovation designs for Newport Harbor High School’s historic bell tower – leveled in 2007 because it was seismically unsafe. Restoring a 99-foot-tall, 77-year-old landmark is no easy feat. Design teams had the challenge of reinventing a structure from the 1930s. Preserving elements which include New Deal art and murals. Reorganizing existing programs to improve the educational experience for students. And doing this all with a community heartbroken by the loss of their initial landmark.
“They did a fabulous job recreating and being true to the original building. The new buildings serve as a backdrop to the existing work and they did a good job with the interiors in taking the modern elements and blending them with the historic elements and making it all work together,” said the Jury Panel. “The aesthetic is beautiful and [the] interiors are well thought out.”
It took four years, four trips to Sacramento, three separate appeals, two denials, two re-crafted proposals, four tours of the school, more than 200 pounds of documents shipped to Sacramento, two Capitol hearings and “no small amount of expert help” to garner the necessary funds for the project, Newport-Mesa Unified Assistant Supt. Paul Reed said at the tower’s grand reopening, in 2009.
As with the educational facilities in South Lake Tahoe, the words “stunning” and “elegant” were used by the jury, to describe the renovation at Newport Harbor High School. If MGM art director Cedric Gibbons, designer of the Oscar statuette, could but see these schools, our hope is that he’d enjoy their aesthetics. And maybe even use the word “timeless” as well.
South Tahoe High School
1735 Lake Tahoe Blvd.
South Lake Tahoe, CA 96150
Newport Harbor High School
600 Irvine Ave.
Newport Beach, CA 92663






