City March 13, 2012 12:05 AM

Charter School Finds Home on Lafayette Avenue

Charter School Finds Home on Lafayette Avenue

A former hospital turned apartment building will have a new use later this summer: a school.  West Buffalo Charter School (WBCS) has finally found a school site in the former Lafayette Hospital at 113 Lafayette Avenue, corner of Barton Street.  WBCS is expecting to welcome its first students in the fall.

"We are so excited to have a building and begin preparing for our opening in August," says Andrea Todoro, School Leader.

WBCS is leasing the entire building from Ellicott Development Group with long-term plans to purchase it from the developer.  Ellicott Development purchased the then-vacant property in 1998 and later converted the structure into 41 market-rate apartments.  This is Ellicott Development's second recent charter school project.  Last year the company renovated the former St. Vincent's orphanage on Ellicott Street for the Health Sciences Charter School. 

WBCS has an approved charter for 270 students that will open with 162 students in grades K-2. It will grow one grade level each year to K-4, reaching a total enrollment in year three of 270 students according to Todoro.  Each floor of the five-story building will house a different grade level.  Minimal exterior changes are planned for now, but an enclosed play area will be constructed.  Work to convert the building from residential to educational use is expected to be underway soon.

lafayetteschool.bmpThe school's founders-- Buffalo Hearing and Speech Center and D'Youville College-- have created a local school with a focus on language and literacy that will be connected to and meet the needs of the West Buffalo community.  It will be unique to the city and is expected to benefit its new neighborhood which boasts a large refugee population where English is a second language.

According to Buffalo Hearing & Speech Center President and CEO Joseph Cozzo, the school evolved from a literacy intervention curriculum designed by Buffalo Hearing & Speech Center called "Language to Literacy."  The school's partner, D'Youville College, will provide to the classroom staff with the latest in teaching technology and assessment to ensure that WBCS provides its graduates with the platform skills necessary for them to become highly successful lifelong learners.  Each classroom will have a teacher, assistant, and speech pathologist working together. 

WBCS has searched for two years for a suitable location.  The school had been working with Savarino Cos. to purchase and renovate the former School 36 on Days Park.  That site was recently purchased by Elmwood Village Charter School after a messy sales process and court fight

Get Connected: WBCS: 716.923.1534

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Lafayette Piece Queen Comvet Set from Mirror Newspaper Archives Blog on April 28, 2012 2:04 AM

[...] high cost to both schools. Dollars were spent on lawyers by both sides (as well [...] Read More

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Seems like a great addition to the West Side. It also seems as though they might be well poised to take the Lafayette School site, should that, in fact close.

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I'll be happy when one of the education "deformers" starts an alternative charter. Calling you Hannah...

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Sounds like you have a personal vendetta....leave it at home loser.

replied to BFLOwatch
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Not really personal. But she is the voice of the deformer movement in Bflo now that Katie's financial contributions to Sam Hoyt has earned her a big job in Albany. Niether has ever set foot in an urban school, yet they have all the answers. Just sayin.


replied to BigBrother87
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Does anyone know the history of the hospital, or what happened to the tenants of the apartments?

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I suppose the hospital died the same death a lot of the smaller hospitals did in Buffalo. Too small of a hospital to keep medical staff, a lack of money - making procedures, too large of a medicaid population made it uncompetitive. That's what happened to Sheehan, Deaconess, Columbus, and even to a certain degree OLV.
As for the apartments, I would imagine the tenants are going to be evicted. From what I've heard, they've been less than stellar tenants anyways. Not exactly the type of residents you want in a neighborhood you're trying to gentrify.

replied to quesaisje3
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Like the use and the site.

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great news!

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Testies testies 1...2...3....testies

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"The school had been working with Savarino Cos. to purchase and renovate the former School 36 on Days Park. That site was recently purchased by Elmwood Village Charter School after a messy sales process and court fight."

Good to see that WBSC found a good location so fast, as several people on here in past articles commented shouldn't be a difficult thing to be able to do on the West Side - despite WBSC not admitting that back then while trying but failing to legally wrestle the former 36 building away from EVCS.

Some credit should go to City Hall elected officials for standing their ground and not caving in to WBSC and Savarino about that. As it turned out, both the Elmwood charter school and WBCS both ended up with what seem like good buildings for their needs.

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I am glad that WBCS found a home (even though they previously claimed there was one, and only one, building in the entire city that would suit their needs), but this came at a very high cost to both schools. Dollars were spent on lawyers by both sides (as well as the inflated purchase price for 40 Days Park) instead of being spent on educating children.

replied to whatever
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Good point about money wasted in litigation, Greenca.

It was good back then to see that each time WCPerspective blogged in a way that looked to be advocating the Savarino/WBCS side of wanting to prevent EVCS from buying the #36 building, as I recall most comments on here made good arguments in disagreement with them. And more important of course, the Common Council also disagreed with that side of it.

Yes, their claims that they wouldn't be able to find a suitable alternative look pretty silly now.

replied to Greenca
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