KAI Transforms 68-Year-Old South Oak Cliff High School in Dallas
“Everything was done to improve the aesthetics and the performance of the students,” said District Superintendent Dr. Michael Hinojosa during a media tour of the renovated school. “It has not been easy taking on buildings that have been neglected and making them first class.”
The district hired KAI to provide programming/planning, architecture, interior design, community engagement, project management, and construction administration on the project. The general contractor was Rogers-O’Brien Construction.
Community feedback on the school’s redesign was paramount. Prior to the design start in 2017, KAI participated in a three-day charette with the community to gather and formulate ideas for the school's renovation. It was agreed that the design theme would center around creating a 21st century learning environment supportive of current and future students.
“The focus behind every KAI project is transforming communities,” said KAI Enterprises President Darren L. James, FAIA. “In this particular case, the students and the community were at odds with the district over the school’s condition and the perceived quality of education the students were receiving as a result. We listened closely to what the community had to say and worked with the district to find a design solution that fulfilled the desires of the parents and students and gave the district a modern, beautiful, and functional facility that everyone could be proud of for years to come."
Approximately 90 percent of the school was renovated, and a pair of additions totaling approximately 60,000 square feet were built. The redesigned school includes a new, two-story addition housing administration offices, four science labs, a community meeting space, and a new entry connecting to a landscaped courtyard. The addition also includes a façade along Marsalis Avenue.
The school also received an athletic facility addition that includes a 2,500-seat gymnasium, weight room, auxiliary gymnasium that serves as a storm shelter, and a circulation space that features a three-story concourse nicknamed the Legacy Concourse that celebrates the heritage of the school's student athletes. The terminus of the Legacy Concourse is the Bear Den, which serves as the new entry and gathering spot for the school’s 1,300 students to engage in academic and social activities.
Two underutilized courtyards were re-purposed for outdoor learning with new landscaping and a terraced amphitheater connecting two of the three floors and seating for lunch and other academic uses.
On two sides of each courtyard inside the existing school, KAI designed new collaboration spaces adjacent to classrooms that allow access to the courtyard at the first floor and an overlook into the courtyards on the second floor. The school also received new mechanical systems and updated classrooms for career/technical training, collegiate academy, fine and performing arts, life skills, and general education.