Santa Barbara High Upgrades HVAC System

By Santa Barbara Unified

The Santa Barbara Unified Board of Trustees approved a new project to provide efficient heating and air conditioning at Santa Barbara High School.

The need for a new heating system started in Spring 2022 when it failed in the 60s, 70s, and 80s wings. The units were over 50 years old and cannot be repaired as parts are no longer available. 

Portable electric heaters have been provided for each classroom in these wings while a long-term fix was worked on. 

On July 25, 2022, the Board approved a proposal from Kruger Bensen Ziemer Architects, Inc. for a design to install a new heating system in the wings. The estimated cost of this project was $1,500,000 with Routine Restricted Maintenance funding. 

During the discovery phase of the project, it was determined that individual heating units for each classroom would be the most cost-effective way to restore heat to the classrooms. This would require the construction of a closet in each room to house the units. 

However, the District looked into the options and recommended installing heat pumps on the roof, which would also provide efficient air conditioning for the classrooms.

“Every year, we see the need for air conditioning growing in our schools as we see more hot summer days. This option will provide Santa Barbara High School with efficient heating and air conditioning that will be better for the environment while saving the District money,” said Dr. Hilda Maldonado, Superintendent.

The $3,158,680 project will be paid for with Measure I 2016 funds. It will include heating, air conditioning, and roofing repairs for 60s, 70s, and 80s wings. 

Work on the project will begin in the Summer of 2024.

SBUnified

Written by SBUnified

Press releases written by the Santa Barbara Unified School District (SBUSD). Learn more at sbunified.org

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50 Comments

  1. Ah, the $35,000,000 in COVID relief SBUSD was to be used to upgrade the Hvac systems to allow for safe opening of schools. You mean SBUSD did not do anything substantive to open the schools with that $35,000,000. Wonder where the money went if it was not downtown on COVID safe opening.
    Because our schools did not open

  2. $35,000,000 for hand washing stations?
    And I don’t see any except for a few bottles of hand sanitizer bottles here & there.
    They did nothing significant to improve health conditions at the schools. The biggest would have been to increase air circulation & air purifiers.
    But nope. They took the money & kept the doors closed
    At $1,800/hour for things like “Coffee w a Black Guy” for a guy with zero qualifications & no training as a psychologist they put the money in their & their friends pockets. Honestly, why is it that SBUSD & the teachers Union don’t care about the kids health, safety or academics.

  3. It’s interesting the decision to add air conditioning, more than doubling the cost of this project to over $3 million is attributed to seeing more hot summer days every year. The data from the Santa Barbara temperature station which is available on the NOAA.gov website shows that daily high temperatures have been in decline since the 1930s. The thermometer says Santa Barbara is seeing fewer hot summer days, not more.

  4. I remember a few years ago when Cary Matsuoka laughed at the notion of A/C for SBHS students, while he and the other ever-growing bunch of administrators attended their constant meetings in the comfort of their air-conditioned offices downtown. It’s beyond time to think of the students’ comfort, but as usual with the current “leadership,” too little, too late and with virtually no institutional knowledge and these days, an equal lack of connection to this community.

  5. I realize you’re trying to throw your usual FUD on anthropogenic warming, so you’ll cherry-pick like crazy.
    If you average, as you mention, and look at more than just 1931, you’ll see the hotter years mostly cluster toward the last 40 years, with an anomalous spike in the 30s. What does that tell you?
    Since AGW tends to magnify extremes in weather, both hot and cold, a more meaningful exercise would be to throw out the hottest and coldest events in each year, and average the rest. A trend of generally higher average temperatures, especially if the average low is increasing, tells you what’s more likely going on.

  6. Sorry but, refrigeration for heating is completely nuts cost wise compared to NG.
    Please don’t BS the crowd with that crap.
    If you don’t get it , get some real science education and get back to me.
    I’m a retired engineer specializing in energy management since 1980.
    If everyone wants an EV, well there just isn’t enough grid for it and your solar on roof can’t keep up with an EV charging rate unless you have a huge array so, the grid fails and it doesn’t matter what you heat/cool your house with.
    I guess NG would solve that problem but we have idiots at the wheel that react to sound bites or media hysterics.
    It was 130+ degrees in 1859.
    Did petroleum cause that?
    Don’t be a fool.
    Maybe it was the Chumash using it to seal their canoes.
    Dang Chumash.

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