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星期二, 3月 05, 2024

5年1億1110萬元工程 波士頓市William E. Carter學校新校舍封頂

MAYOR WU, SUPERINTENDENT SKIPPER, CITY OFFICIALS CELEBRATE CARTER SCHOOL TOPPING OFF CEREMONY 

Topping off marks milestone in the construction of a state-of-the-art facility for BPS’s students with the highest needs

 

BOSTON - Tuesday, March 5, 2024 - Today Mayor Michelle Wu, BPS Superintendent Mary Skipper, the City’s Public Facilities Department, and the Massachusetts School Building Authority (MSBA) participated in a topping off ceremony for the new William E. Carter School. The Carter School serves students ages 12-22 with disabilities and complex learning needs. The transformation of the Carter marks a renewed commitment to better serve these students, with more classrooms, a new early childhood program and PreK-12 pathway, a ther

apeutic pool, and sensory garden. The new Carter School, located on the site of the former building in the South End, is included in the five-year capital plan for $111 million, including design and construction costs. The Massachusetts School Building Authority (MSBA) will reimburse the City of Boston upwards of $30 million for this investment in the district’s students with the highest needs. 

“Today’s topping off ceremony gets us one step closer to opening the Carter School that our students, families, and BPS staff deserve,” said Mayor Michelle Wu. “This new facility will provide the Carter School community with the learning spaces needed for some of our students with the greatest needs. Together we’re ensuring every BPS student has the opportunities they need to thrive.” 

"The topping off of the new Carter School represents a beacon of hope and progress for our students with disabilities and complex learning needs,” said BPS Superintendent Mary Skipper. “I'm proud of and grateful for the work School Leader Mark O’Connor and his dedicated team of educators have done in their current space, and the new facility will enable us to provide even more tailored, comprehensive support, ensuring every student has the resources and environment they need to thrive academically, socially, and emotionally." 

"The Carter School's topping off ceremony is a testament to the collaborative efforts of our community, city officials, and educational leaders in prioritizing the needs of our most vulnerable students,” said Boston School Committee Chairperson Jeri Robinson. “This new facility will serve as a cornerstone for innovative education and empowerment for years to come." 

Today’s topping off ceremony celebrates the placement of the last beam on the new building, marking the completion of the future school's steel structure. Mayor Wu, City leaders, and Carter School students and staff were at the event to sign the final beam. The design of the new facility will provide a safe, healthy, and inclusive school environment, unlocking each Carter School student’s full potential. The new facility is planned to open for the start of the 2025-2026 school year. Carter students have been using a portion of the Lilla Frederick School while their new space is under construction. Public Facilities, in partnership with BPS and the MSBA, began construction on the new facility in the summer of 2022. 

At the Carter School, teachers and therapists work on learning objectives together to provide individualized, intensive education programming for students with the highest needs requiring total personal care. Due to these unique challenges, each classroom is composed of five students, one teacher, and two teaching assistants. The new building will better enable educators to provide an accessible, developmentally appropriate educational environment that includes data driven instruction and individualized services for all students. The new construction will:

 

·       Increase the number of classrooms from 5 to 12 classrooms, (increasing the number of students from 25 to 60).

·       Establish a Carter School Early Childhood program and a Pre-K-12 pathway.

·       Include a therapeutic pool that is accessible to all students. 

·       Feature a rooftop outdoor classroom and sensory garden to connect students with the outdoors and provide an engaging environment to support communication development.

·       A literacy commons when students and visitors first enter the building to enforce the school’s mission of developing communication and literacy skills for all students, in alignment with the district goals of equitable literacy instruction for all.

·       Enforce a whole-school design that views every space from the lens of how it can best increase each student’s ability to communicate across all environments.

 The Carter School was designed to be a zero net energy building with an emphasis on energy efficiency and green infrastructure to support the City of Boston’s carbon neutrality and sustainability goals. The school’s rooftop garden is designed to absorb rainwater and slow the burden of storm water surge in a city prone to coastal flooding. The garden also mitigates the urban heat island effect in a neighborhood that is unequally burdened by urban overheating. The building’s envelope is designed for increased thermal performance to enhance the energy efficiency of the property.

“We are thrilled to have reached this construction milestone! The Carter community deserves a space that reflects its excellence,” said Kerrie Griffin, Director of Public Facilities. “Reaching this step brings us closer to fulfilling our commitment to delivering a contemporary, well-equipped learning environment tailored to the needs of all students.”  

The MSBA has been a valued partner for the Carter School and BPS. The design process began in the winter of 2020, with participation from the Carter School students, staff, families, and other community partners. The design process allowed the team to partner with the Carter School community  to remove the facility barriers to Carter student’s education in a way that has never before been possible in the special education field. 

“This is an exciting time for students and teachers at the Carter School, and the entire Boston community,” said State Treasurer Deborah B. Goldberg, Chair of the Massachusetts School Building Authority. “The MSBA looks forward to our continued partnership and completing this project, not only meeting the needs and supporting the current student population but generations to come.”

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