LEXINGTON, Ky. – A downtown landmark will become home to a state-of-the-art career and technical center following a unanimous vote of the Fayette County Board of Education to buy the Lexington Herald-Leader building for $7.5 million.
“We are excited to acquire and repurpose this tremendous location,” said Manny Caulk, Fayette County Public Schools superintendent. “The Herald-Leader has played a central role in our community for decades and we are grateful for their partnership in this endeavor.”
The district plans to bring its existing career and technical education, or CTE, programs — currently split between two campuses at Eastside Technical Center and Southside Technical Center — together under one roof in the newspaper building.
“We are looking not just to have the best CTE offerings in the central Kentucky region or the state; we want to make sure that the students who come through our career programs are the best-prepared students in the nation,” Caulk said. “This also allows us to take the existing properties, which are landlocked and use those facilities in a different way.”
Wholesale renovation of the Eastside and Southside buildings have been priorities on the District Facilities Plan with a total price tag of $23 million for more than eight years, said school district chief operating officer Myron Thompson. As the district was scouting possible locations for other innovative offerings, officials began discussing merging all of the CTE offerings, Thompson said.
“The District’s Strategic Plan calls for Excellent Student Opportunities where students are able to explore a spectrum of industries and sectors to discover and develop their talents, interests and passions,” Caulk said. “Combining these two programs gives us the opportunity to create a 22nd Century future-forward career and technical education campus and expand offerings.”
The Herald-Leader building is 162,476 square feet located on a 6.73-acre campus at 100 Midland Ave.
“While we can’t grow in our existing spaces, this will provide a large space that is flexible enough to continually upgrade and prepare our students for rapidly advancing industry standards,” Caulk said.
The property purchase will not be final until the district completes several due diligence steps and receives final approval from the Kentucky Department of Education. The Local Planning Committee is in the process of amending the district facility plan to include a merged career and technical center.
“It has always been our hope and goal that, once our building was sold, its new use would have a positive impact on the community and downtown Lexington,” said Peter Baniak, Lexington Herald-Leader executive editor and general manager. “This new use as a school campus achieves that goal.”
The Herald-Leader’s main operations will continue to be based at 100 Midland until the property sale closes, which is likely to happen this fall. The Herald-Leader, United Way of the Bluegrass, and Seikowave Inc. will remain in the building for up to six months after closing at $11.67 per square foot per year. The Herald-Leader has been printed in Lousiville for the past several years and most of the paper's operation have moved to a building on Winchester Road. The property has been on the market for some time.
“Acquiring this location is a huge step in that direction,” Thompson said. “Land and properties that meet our unique educational and operational needs are very scarce. We have been very fortunate in recent years to obtain some great properties and I'm glad we are putting this in our real estate portfolio to enhance our CTE programs.”
The programs at Southside include carpentry construction, electrical technology, electronics technology, advanced manufacturing, welding, culinary arts, pre-nursing and medical sciences. The programs at Eastside include automotive and transportation technology, media arts: video/studio production/cinematography, digital design & game development, fire & emergency services, law enforcement and homeland security.
Thompson said he anticipates renovations and remodeling will not begin for a minimum of three years, and the school district plans to preserve some of the building’s history when the CTE school opens.
“There are front pages from the Herald-Leader inside from when President Kennedy was shot, Martin Luther King Jr. was shot and from when we landed on the moon,” Thompson said. “We plan to have a section in the new school dedicated to what the Herald-Leader has done over the years.”