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Bid Approved For $30 Million CSLA At Lakeside Project

Bid Approved For $30 Million CSLA At Lakeside Project Wednesday, May 5, 2021 - by Joseph Dycus The Hamilton County Commissioners on Wednesday approved TriCon Inc.’s bid for the Chattanooga School for the Liberal Arts (CSLA) at Lakeside project, which will cost around $30 million. Commissioner Tim Boyd noted he has long been a proponent of finding CSLA a new home, and thanked the commissioners for approving the bid.   “This $30 million is going to repurpose Lakeside Elementary to a K-12 magnet school,” Commissioner Boyd said. “I’ve worked for over 10 years to get CSLA a new facility, since it’s one of the worst buildings in the county that we’re teaching kids out of.”

Architecture highlights from southern Africa include projects from Zambia and Mozambique

Architecture highlights from southern Africa include projects from Zambia and Mozambique Dezeen 5 hrs ago © Provided by Dezeen Sub-Saharan Africa Architectural Guide To conclude our collaboration with Dom Publishers, the editors of the Sub-Saharan Africa Architectural Guide have picked architecture highlights from southern Africa. Edited by Philipp Meuser and Adil Dalbai, the Sub-Saharan Africa Architectural Guide features over 850 buildings from the 49 sub-Saharan countries in Africa. For the very first time the architecture of every sub-Saharan country is presented individually in an individual chapter, some of which cover the respective country s contemporary architecture for the first time ever, explained Dalbai in an interview with Dezeen.

Architecture highlights from southern Africa

Architecture highlights from southern Africa
dezeen.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dezeen.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

How Austerity Destroyed the Public Good

The decades-long war on government has left struggling Americans to fend for themselves. ILLUSTRATION BY ROBERT YOUNG In 2005, I wrote a piece for The Nation surveying the immediate aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. I concluded it on this cautionary note: We have to be clear that what happened in New Orleans is an extreme and criminally tragic coming home to roost of the con that cutting public spending makes for a better society. It is a shocking foretaste of a future that many more of us will experience less dramatically, often quietly as individuals, as we lose pensions, union protection, access to healthcare and public education, Social Security, bankruptcy and tort protection, and as we are called upon to feed an endless war machine.

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