


The remaining 1,237 students would move in after completion of phase two, which is expected to cost around $102.2 million. Measure H revenue will pay for $135 million of the project's first stage and the $31 million remainder will come from other sources like the state reimbursement for building Amador Elementary School, as well as developer fees if the AT Dublin project is approved. During that time an administration building, student union, library, kitchen, visual and performing arts classrooms, gymnasium and other athletic facilities would be built, as would approximately 500 parking spaces. The first round of students would start attending the school in fall 2022.Ībout 1,308 students could be accommodated after completion of the first phase, which is projected to cost about $166.6 million. Multiple public meetings have been held over the past year concerning the new school, which is designed to house approximately 2,500 students and will be built in two stages.

“It has never been a question of ‘if’ we can acquire the land via eminent domain, rather ‘when’,” Marken said. Otherwise, a trial would take place in early December, where a jury would decide the value of the property. The district and owner have undergone one round of mediation so far a settlement conference scheduled Nov. Superintendent Dave Marken recently announced that “the eminent domain process has been moving forward and should be resolved by the end of the year.” DUSD offered to buy the 25-acre property from the current owner last fall but neither side could agree on a price, prompting the district to file an eminent domain lawsuit in October 2018. Plans for a new high school in the city of Dublin are falling into place but the site at the corner of Central Parkway and Chancery Lane where the future campus will sit remains out of reach for the Dublin Unified School District. Artist's rendering of the high school planned to be built in eastern Dublin, starting next year.
