Old Indianola Junior High undergoing renovations for Metro Schools expansion

Photo: model of new renovated  Indianola Junior High School entrance

COLUMBUS, Ohio — A historic junior high school is getting a new lease on life as the city’s semi-public, non-charter school moves forward with plans to expand.

Metro Schools is renovating the former Indianola Junior High School on 19th Street with plans to expand its STEM-based middle and high school program. Meka Pace, the Metro Schools Superintendent, said it was time to expand as the system has a waitlist every year.

Indianola Junior High bears the plaque of being the first junior high school in the country in 1909. That original building is a few blocks away on 16th Street, but the building under renovation now took its place in 1929. It’s on the National Register for Historic Places, meaning the exterior must look as close to the original as possible. The inside, though, is theirs to change.

"On the inside, right, it's ours to do with. So, if the inside doesn't fit what the school program is, then you should change it and make it what it needs to be,” said Pace.

The project is an expensive undertaking and comes with a price tag of about $34 million. The building had been empty since about 2010 and was sold to OSU from Columbus City Schools in 2018.  

It’s Battelle’s biggest philanthropic donation, committing about $13 million to the project as it and the Ohio State University were instrumental in the founding of Metro Schools in 2006. It is now an independent STEM school.

Read the full article here.

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