A long-awaited report on the future of Stillwater public schools recommends as much as $254 million in new buildings and renovations to accommodate rapidly rising student numbers and to repair aging infrastructure.
The report, compiled over several months by a design committee and presented Thursday to the Stillwater school board, urges immediate work to add classrooms in Lake Elmo and Woodbury, where housing developments promise to bring a crush of new students to already overcrowded schools.
It recommends that the district replace the existing Lake Elmo Elementary School with two new schools and add eight classrooms to Brookview Elementary in Woodbury.
The report was intended to guide the school board as it prepares to go to voters with a referendum, perhaps as early as next year. But several board members said more work needs to be done.
Board Chairwoman Sarah Stivland said she wants to see the board "come up with something that truly does unite our community."
"We want something that's going to succeed," she said.
Other high priorities listed in the report include renovations to Stonebridge Elementary in Stillwater and the remodeling of the former Oak Park Elementary School, on the Stillwater-Oak Park Heights border, for school district offices and two specialized learning programs.
Also on the list of proposed improvements are a new middle school gym and music room, an expanded high school auditorium, possible construction of a new Early Childhood Family Center in the southern portion of the district, and new classrooms, natural lighting and flexible learning spaces.