Work is to begin Monday to transform Camden's historic
Wilson Building on North Broadway into an outpost for LEAP Academy University
Charter's high school, an expansion that will include a gym, a cafe with WiFi,
and a college resource center open to all the city's students.
The expansion of LEAP's S.T.E.M. High School, which
specializes in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics, will help the
city's largest charter school network continue to grow, said LEAP founder
Gloria Bonilla-Santiago.
"It will feel a little like a college campus,"
she said. "Our students are very much in need of that ambience, that
chance to socialize and work together on ideas."
The renovation of the 1920s-era, 12-story building known
as Camden's first skyscraper is expected to be complete by March or April, she
said. LEAP bought the building, adjacent to the school's Cooper Street campus,
for $2 million in February.
Situated near three college campuses, Cooper University
Hospital, and two public transportation stations, the 73,000-square-foot
property has long been seen as ripe for development. It once housed Coca-Cola
and the Miller Brewing Co., but has sat vacant since the 1990s, its only
revenue coming from an ATM on the street and cell towers on the roof.
The building was partly renovated in 2009 by an
out-of-state development firm that intended to fill the space with offices and
retail space, but those owners eventually returned it to the bank.
Meanwhile, as Camden's state-run schools have continued
to struggle with dismal test scores, the number of charter and hybrid
Renaissance schools in the city has grown. About one in four of the district's
15,000 students attend charters.
Founded in 1997, LEAP now operates lower, upper, and high
schools that serve 1,500 children, Bonilla-Santiago said, and has a wait list
with enough names to fill two more schools. The high school has had a 100
percent graduation rate for a decade, and most of its students are accepted to
college.
Opponents have said charter and Renaissance schools are
draining much-needed millions from the district's budget, and others have
raised concerns that the trend will lead to a complete corporate takeover.
Bonilla-Santiago said all of Camden would benefit from
LEAP's successes, which she attributed to its focus on smaller class sizes and
longer school days, as well as smarter spending of the $15,000 per pupil the
schools receive from the state.
"This is part of a long-term strategy for
transforming public schools in the city," she said.
Source: Philly.com
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