West Louisville gets $28M elementary school

West Louisville gets $28M elementary school

After two decades, West Louisville gets a new elementary school. The school which is yet to be named will be connected to the West Louisville YMCA on Broadway and is to host up to 650 students. The 79,000-square-foot building is to be constructed by Marrillia Design and Construction.

Its equipped with energy-efficient features such as geothermal heating, cooling, and windows. The news school also means new employment opportunities for the residents of West Louiseville, especially K-12 employees.

This decision was seen as a long-awaited boon as the previous school building was in a depleted state and "needed to be condemned several decades ago" said JCPS Superintendent Marty Pollio.

Source: Herald Leader

You might also like

For several reasons, the IT sector is appealing to job seekers. ...Read more

Despite the opposition of restaurant owners who worried it would raise customers' bills, California Governor Gavin Newsom on Monday signed a nation-leading law providing more than 500,000 fast food employees additional authority and rights. ...Read more

Demands for improved pay and workplace environments are coming from workers in California to New York. ...Read more

New graduates from institutions in Nigeria and other African nations have been made aware of job prospects by Microsoft. ...Read more

A mattress company is searching for a role where napping while working is not only acceptable but also required. 'Casper Sleepers' are being hired by Casper, a New York-based business established in 2014. ...Read more

Articles

If your organization is on a hiring spree too, one of the key things to consider is the recruitment ...Read more

Teaching jobs: transformative teacher roles you can undertake amidst the teacher shortage in the US ...Read more

The Great Resignation, as experts call it, is a rather fitting term for a phenomenon where millions ...Read more

Before the advent of the COVID-19 pandemic, about 7 million people in the US alone were working rem ...Read more