
East Austin high school wins national design award
An east Austin high school has won a prestigious national design award.
Why it matters: The design of Eastside Early College High School is meant to reflect the complicated legacy of desegregation while also providing a state-of-the-art learning environment.
Catch up quick: The high school cost roughly $80 million, with money coming from a 2017 Austin ISD bond. It's on the site of the old L.C. Anderson High School.
Anderson served as Austin's only Black high school for more than 80 years until it was closed in 1971 during desegregation.
Driving the news: Earlier this month, the project, by Austin-based architecture firm Perkins and Will, won an education facility design award from the American Institute of Architects for its sustainable, resilient and inclusive design.
How it works: The design team reconstructed brick-by-brick parts of the old building, which had to be torn down, while expanding it into a 4-story, 173,000-square-foot school that overlooks the Austin skyline.
What they're saying: Members of the Perkins and Will team met with Anderson alumni as they put together the design.
The shutting down of the old Anderson school "tore apart friendships, shut down Friday night lights and morning doughnut parties and cut off students from favorite teachers," Angela Whitaker-Williams, the project's managing principal at Perkins and Will, tells Axios.
The challenge was "how do we reflect on the history and propel it into the future," she says.
Zoom in: The team recreated the brick entrance facade, but built classroom space that would be "very flexible, collaborative and high-tech," Whitaker-Williams said.
"The building's base incorporates the original Anderson High School's brick and midcentury modern lines, honoring the deep African American history of the site," reads a project description from the design firm.
"Rising from this foundation, the new campus symbolizes the perseverance of a community whose school was closed by federal court order."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Axios
6 hours ago
- Axios
East Austin high school wins national design award
An east Austin high school has won a prestigious national design award. Why it matters: The design of Eastside Early College High School is meant to reflect the complicated legacy of desegregation while also providing a state-of-the-art learning environment. Catch up quick: The high school cost roughly $80 million, with money coming from a 2017 Austin ISD bond. It's on the site of the old L.C. Anderson High School. Anderson served as Austin's only Black high school for more than 80 years until it was closed in 1971 during desegregation. Driving the news: Earlier this month, the project, by Austin-based architecture firm Perkins and Will, won an education facility design award from the American Institute of Architects for its sustainable, resilient and inclusive design. How it works: The design team reconstructed brick-by-brick parts of the old building, which had to be torn down, while expanding it into a 4-story, 173,000-square-foot school that overlooks the Austin skyline. What they're saying: Members of the Perkins and Will team met with Anderson alumni as they put together the design. The shutting down of the old Anderson school "tore apart friendships, shut down Friday night lights and morning doughnut parties and cut off students from favorite teachers," Angela Whitaker-Williams, the project's managing principal at Perkins and Will, tells Axios. The challenge was "how do we reflect on the history and propel it into the future," she says. Zoom in: The team recreated the brick entrance facade, but built classroom space that would be "very flexible, collaborative and high-tech," Whitaker-Williams said. "The building's base incorporates the original Anderson High School's brick and midcentury modern lines, honoring the deep African American history of the site," reads a project description from the design firm. "Rising from this foundation, the new campus symbolizes the perseverance of a community whose school was closed by federal court order."


Axios
10 hours ago
- Axios
New England site uses AR to preserve history this Juneteenth
An augmented reality-based website will help visitors peel back the layers of a historic — and nearly forgotten — burial ground in Portsmouth. It's one of several ways the Black Heritage Trail of New Hampshire is commemorating Juneteenth. The big picture: The African Burial Ground's AR project is the latest effort in New England to use emerging technology to bolster historic preservation and storytelling. The Museum of African American History launched an exhibit in February featuring an AI-powered hologram of abolitionist Frederick Douglass. The stories of Holocaust survivors will be retold long after they're gone thanks to holographic video displays in the upcoming Holocaust Museum Boston. State of play: The AR platform will be unveiled Thursday at Memorial Park to celebrate its tenth anniversary, says Janice Hastings, who oversees special projects for the trail. Visitors, who will get a link to the platform on-site, will see pages pop up on their phone as they walk from one bronze statue to the next, telling the history of abolitionism and the African Burial Ground in Portsmouth. At the center of this story is a piece of history nearly lost. More than 200 enslaved people's graves lay below the cement roads and were overlooked until city workers came across five coffins in 2003. (That discovery, and the efforts of local advocates such as Valerie Cunningham, ultimately led to the park's creation.) How it works: The AR platform tells stories ranging from the 1779 petition to abolish slavery in New Hampshire to efforts to preserve the African Burial Ground's legacy in the last two decades. What they're saying: Telling this history in a state known as majority-white keeps alive the often-forgotten stories of New Hampshire's communities of freed Blacks and their contributions, says JerriAnne Boggis, the trail's executive director. "It's not just Black history. The history that we look at, the history that we share, is part of the American culture," Boggis tells Axios. This year, the organization is focusing on "reclaiming the past" and "reshaping the future" as it celebrates Juneteenth. The organization last week hosted discussions featuring Black descendants of founding fathers. It also unveiled a headstone honoring Dinah Chase Whipple, who founded the first school in New Hampshire for Black children and married Prince Whipple, a Revolutionary War veteran. Friction point: That programming is harder at a time when the Trump administration is cracking down on anything labeled as diversity, equity and inclusion. New Hampshire passed a law barring the teaching of "divisive concepts," limiting lessons on race and gender. A federal judge struck down the law in May. Schools that once sent students on tours have shied away from the trail's programming, Boggis says. Yes, but: Boggis says the trail is intent on preserving history and sparking dialogue.


UPI
2 days ago
- UPI
On This Day, June 15: Supreme Court rules civil rights law protects LGBTQ workers
1 of 5 | Joseph Fons waves a rainbow flag in front of the Supreme Court after the high court released a decision that bans LGBTQ employment discrimination on June 15, 2020 in Washington, D.C. File Photo by Kevin Dietsch/UPI | License Photo On this date in history: In 1215, under pressure from rebellious barons, England's King John signed the Magna Carta, a crucial first step toward creating Britain's constitutional monarchy. In 1752, Benjamin Franklin, in a dangerous experiment, demonstrated the relationship between lightning and electricity by flying a kite during a storm in Philadelphia. An iron key suspended from the kite string attracted a lightning bolt. In 1785, two Frenchmen attempting to cross the English Channel in a hot-air balloon were killed when their balloon caught fire and crashed. It was the first fatal aviation accident. In 1846, the U.S.-Canadian border was established. File Photo by Chris Corder/UPI In 1877, Henry Ossian Flipper, born a slave in Thomasville, Ga., became the first Black cadet to graduate from West Point. The U.S. Army later court martialed and dismissed him, but President Bill Clinton posthumously pardoned him in 1999. In 1904, the excursion steamboat General Slocum caught fire on the East River in New York, killing 1,121 people. In 1934, the Great Smoky Mountains National Park was established on a tract of land straddling North Carolina and Tennessee. President Franklin D. Roosevelt dedicated the park on Sept. 2, 1940. In 1944, U.S. forces invaded the Japanese-occupied Mariana Islands in World War II. By day's end, a beachhead had been established on the island of Saipan. In 1987, Richard Norton of Philadelphia and Calin Rosetti of West Germany completed the first polar circumnavigation of Earth in a single-engine propeller aircraft, landing in Paris after a 38,000-mile flight. In 2007, a Mississippi jury convicted a reputed Ku Klux Klansman, James Ford Seale, in the abductions and killings of two black teenagers 43 years earlier. Seale was sentenced to life in prison and died in 2011. In 2012, an executive order by President Barack Obama would allow hundreds of thousands of undocumented immigrants who came to the United States as children to legally seek work permits and obtain documents such as driver's licenses. The program was called the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA. File Photo by Kevin Dietsch/UPI In 2020, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that federal civil rights law protects LGBTQ workers from being fired based on their sexual or gender orientation. In 2023, a British parliamentary panel concluded that former Prime Minister Boris Johnson intentionally misled the House of Commons when he told it there had been no lockdown parties in Downing Street during the COVID-19 pandemic. File Photo by Hugo Philpott/UPI