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Ocosta Elementary School

Ocosta Elementary School
Ocosta Elementary School - Cascadia Rising 2016.png
Ocosta Elementary School exterior shortly after construction
Location
2580 South Montesano Street
Westport, Washington

United States
Coordinates 46°51′44″N 124°05′59″W / 46.86217°N 124.09981°W / 46.86217; -124.09981Coordinates: 46°51′44″N 124°05′59″W / 46.86217°N 124.09981°W / 46.86217; -124.09981
Information
Type Elementary school
Established 1967
School district Ocosta School District
Principal David Dooley
Faculty 27
Grades Preschool to 6th grade
Enrollment 328 students (2014–15)
Mascot Wildcats
Website

Ocosta Elementary School is a public elementary school in Westport, Washington, operated by the Ocosta School District.

Part of the original elementary school was replaced in 2016 with a new facility featuring the first public tsunami refuge to be constructed in the United States, located atop the gym, 53 feet (16 m) above sea level.

The school district originally used a round building on the current campus built in 1967 and demolished in 2014. The elementary school was split from the junior/senior high school in the 1980s, and later expanded with new wings.

On April 23, 2013, a $13.8 million bond issue was approved by 70 percent of voters to fund the construction of a new elementary school with modern features, including a tsunami shelter. The school district broke ground on the project in January 2015, and was dedicated on June 11, 2016.

The school moved classes into the new addition during the fall of 2016.

As of the 2014–15 school year, Ocosta Elementary School has an enrollment of 328 students and a 26-member faculty.

The school consists of three buildings, connected by covered passageways. The main building, underneath the tsunami shelter, has 23 classrooms and houses the administrative offices and gym.

The new addition was designed by TCF Architecture of Tacoma, Washington, and engineered by Degenkolb Engineers of Seattle. The gymnasium's interior includes historic photographs of the region and finishes resembling beach glass, sea grass, cranberry bogs and a compass rose furnished by local artisans.

In the event of a Cascadia subduction zone earthquake off the Washington coast, evacuation from the vicinity of the school would be by vehicle on single-lane State Route 105 and would have to get all the children to safety off the low-lying peninsula within a 30-minute window between National Tsunami Warning Center's alert and the arrival of a 40-foot (12 m) tsunami. Realistic travel time to high ground in an emergency has been estimated to be around 100 minutes, more than three times as long as the margin of safety.


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