Colorado to Lose 1918 School

Readers seek help for preservation emergencies
/ Dec. 21, 2005

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The Columbian School is scheduled to be demolished. (Lucille Dixon)
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Dear Preservation 911,
This is of immediate concern.
The Columbian School, on the National Register of Historic Places
and noted as the most valuable building in Las Animas, Colo., is
in immediate danger of demolition (bids for demo are going out this
week). It is listed as one of only three buildings in Tom Noel's book Buildings of United States, Buildings of Colorado, that the Architect Historian
Society determined should be preserved. It is also on the 2004 Colorado
Most Endangered Places List.
Built in l918, it is a Mission revival brick,
the only known of this style in Colorado, with a beautiful open
air-courtyard surrounded by columns of brick arches. It was given
an $8 million replacement value in about 2000. It had major
renovations in about 1990 with more than $1 million in improvements and updating
(which is daily being stripped). It was built by Larson/Nelson
a team from Sweden, famous for other magnificent buildings in
the U.S. (Michigan, Cripple Creek, Ft. Lyon).
Columbian has been a victim of the school replacement
saga. A victim of strategies developed in l991 to "defer maintenance,"
in an elaborate scheme and effort to pass a bond to build new
facilities.
I believe the school board is determined to demolish
it for a parking lot. Offers have been made for up to $75,000 or $100,000
for alternative use, as a community center, etc.
Would the board entertain an offer to build a new
gym in exchange for saving the structure? (The board appears to
be heavily influenced by contractors noted for teardowns.)
Please help if you can. Call 719-456-1296, or Hansen
Realty 719-456-0406.
Sincerely,
Judy Thomeczek
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