Old School Square

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Delray Beach Schools
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
Location: Palm Beach County, Florida, USA
Nearest city: Delray Beach, Florida
Built/Founded: 1913
Added to NRHP: March 10, 1988
Governing body: National Register of Historic Places
The Cornell Museum occupies the original (1913) school building. Its eight classrooms once housed 740 students.
The Cornell Museum occupies the original (1913) school building. Its eight classrooms once housed 740 students.

Old School Square Cultural Arts Center is a historic area located at 51 North Swinton Avenue in Delray Beach, Florida, United States. It is built on the former site and former buildings of the now defunct Delray Elementary School and Delray High School, at the corner of Atlantic Avenue and Swinton Avenue, anchoring Delray's historic downtown shopping district. As of 2006, Old School Square comprises the Cornell Museum, the Crest Theatre, a refurbished vintage gymnasium, and an outdoor entertainment pavilion.

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[edit] History

The old high school building now houses the Crest Theatre.
The old high school building now houses the Crest Theatre.
The entertainment pavilion is a recent addition to Old School Square.
The entertainment pavilion is a recent addition to Old School Square.

[edit] Beginnings

The first construction on the site was the erection of Delray Elementary School in 1913, at the corner of Atlantic and Swinton Avenues. The school served grades 1-12. As the city's population grew, it became necessary for the school to grow, and Delray High School was constructed on the same site north of the original Delray Elementary in 1925. Eventually, the city's population grew to the point at which these two schools were no longer sufficient and plans were drawn to build a new high school north of town, which became first Seacrest High School, and then Atlantic High School after the racial integration in schools resulting from the civil rights movement. Delray High's last graduating class was the class of 1949. When the new school opened, Delray Elementary expanded to fill both buildings on the old campus.

[edit] Abandonment

As time passed, the buildings of Delray Elementary increasingly fell into disrepair, and the Palm Beach County School Board abandoned the campus in the mid-1980s. A new elementary school opened in the western part of the city in 1988, Banyan Creek Elementary School. A group of concerned citizens, led by members of the Delray Beach Historical Society, started an initiative to preserve and restore the buildings of the former Delray Elementary and Delray High schools. They recognized the cultural value of preserving buildings that had been an integral part of the city's history. More importantly, they saw the that the buildings possessed the potential to be transformed into a new cultural arts center for the area. Furthermore, the renovation of the site was seen as a spearhead for the reinvigoration of the whole downtown area- which at the time had barely a 30 percent occupancy rate.

[edit] Rebirth

In 1986, the 4-acre site was incorporated as Old School Square, Inc. Plans for renovation of the buildings commenced. In 1988, Delray Elementary was closed and the property was acquired by the city of Delray Beach. On March 10 of that year "Delray Beach Schools" was listed on the National Register of Historic Places. By 1990, the first phase of the project was complete, as the Cornell Museum of Art and History opened in the original Delray Elementary School building. Furthermore, the exterior renovation of the high school building was completed. Three years later, in 1993, the Crest Theatre opened for its first season in the former high school auditorium, which had been converted and modernized into a modern professional venue for the performing arts. In 1998, renovation of the Crest Theatre was completed as the work on the classrooms was finished, and they were opened to the public.

As the first phase of a new 10 year master plan for expansion, an outdoor entertainment pavilion opened in 2002, complete with a concession building. Covered loggias enclose the grassy seating area.

[edit] References