Construction on Minuteman High School in Lincoln is progressing smoothly and the new building will open its doors to students in September 2019.
The new building broke ground in June 2017 after years of effort, as Minuteman had to secure Town Meeting approvals from every town in the Minuteman school district before the project could be bonded. Faced with having to assume a portion of the school construction debt, seven of the 16 towns including Lincoln that sent very few students to Minuteman withdrew from the district. The other towns that withdrew are Belmont, Boxborough, Carlisle, Sudbury, Wayland, and Weston. The project cleared its last hurdle in September 2016 with a district-wide vote.
Before the withdrawal vote, a Lincoln working group determined that it would be cheaper to send Lincoln students to Minuteman or another vocational school as out-of-district students — even with an added capital fee and out-of-district tuition — than to remain in the district and pay a share of the debt. However, Lincoln has benefited from building permit fees of approximately $1 million from Minuteman — money that is being applied as the “free cash” portion of the budget for the Lincoln School project.
Students from Lincoln and other non-member towns are still eligible to enroll at Minuteman or other vocational school, but only if there are spaces available.
The Massachusetts School Building Authority is funding $44 million of the $145 million cost for the school, which is designed for 628 students. A repair-only option would have cost $105 million.
Before work began, Minuteman hired an archeological firm to check for any historical artifacts but didn’t find any. However, excavation uncovered a large rock that probably marked the site of gatherings for several Native American tribes including the Abenaki. Workers planned to remove it with explosives, but officials decided to move it aside temporarily and then install it in a place of honor once work is complete.
“It’s a significant piece of history we wanted to honor and maintain that [shows what] this land and this ground is about,” Director/Superintendent Edward Bouquillon said in this video about the rock. This page on the Minuteman project website has links to more videos, including a 3D virtual tour of the completed building as well as construction updates shot with drones (the most recent one was filmed on November 30).
The current high school building just over the town line in Lexington will be torn down and replaced with athletic fields and parking, which were formerly on the Lincoln portion of the property. The district plans to explore public/private partnerships to develop an athletic complex and other facilities for use by its students and the Minuteman School District members. Lexington has promised funding for synthetic turf so organizations from that town will have somewhat greater access, Bouquillon said.