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Brickwork Underway On Future Carrie L. Dicken School, September 1956

Brickwork Underway On Future Carrie L. Dicken School, September 1956 image
Year:
1956
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, September 21, 1956
Caption:
Going Up, Brick-By-Brick: This $810,717, 18-classroom southwest school is getting "bricked-up" on its 12-acre site west of the present end of Coronado Dr. Scheduled to be finished by Sept. 1, 1957, the school is about 35 per cent complete, Architect Charles W. Lane of Ann Arbor reports. It is one of three same-size elementaries now under construction in the Ann Arbor School District to house a total of 1,620 grade-school children. Each school's normal capacity is 540.

New Carrie L. Dicken School On Ann Arbor's South Side, February 1957

New Carrie L. Dicken School On Ann Arbor's South Side, February 1957 image
Year:
1957
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, February 21, 1957
Caption:
For 1,500 Pupils: The three new elementary school buildings pictured costing a total of $2,490,197, will house up to 1,500 kindergarten through sixth graders when they open in September. The three schools were named last night by the Ann Arbor Board of Education in honor of educators who served in local public schools. The new Levi D. Wines School (top, at left) at Newport and Sunset Rds. and the Carrie M. Dicken School (bottom, at left) [this photo] west of the end of Coronado Dr. each cost about $811,000. They will be finished April 15 and June 1, respectively. The Judson G. Pattengill School (above) at Carhart Ave. and Crestland Dr. will be finished in May. It cost $867,615.

Deer Hunting Season Slows Down Construction on Future Carrie L. Dicken School, November 1956

Deer Hunting Season Slows Down Construction on Future Carrie L. Dicken School, November 1956 image
Year:
1956
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, November 15, 1956
Caption:
Construction Slowed: Construction progress on Ann Arbor public schools' new, $810,717 18-classroom southwest elementary shown here was virtually halted today -- after many construction men left to go deer hunting. Donald D. MacMullen, associate architect for Charles W. Lane, who blueprinted the school, said the workers who remained at construction jobs were shifted to the Newport Rd. School. Both schools are being built by the Henry W. deKoning Construction Co. Some mechanical work is going on at the southwest school west of the end of Coronado Dr. An anticipated two-week absence of some workers is not expected to delay construction of either school beyond completion dates between next May and July. MacMullen said the Newport Rd. school is 16 per cent ahead of its construction schedule, while the southwest school is 14 per cent ahead of schedule.