School type public; charter Grades K–5, 9–12 Language English Phone +1 212-674-5000 | Superintendent Marisol Bradbury Enrollment 1,775 (September 2015) Area Various Founded 1913 | |
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Address 40 Irving Pl, New York, NY 10003, USA Principal Daniel Walsh, Susan Dicicco, Seung Yu, Amber Najmi Shadid, Bernardo Ascona, Paola Zalkind Similar Internatio High School at, Stuyvesant High School, Downtown Brooklyn Young Ad, Xavier High School, The Legacy Corporati |
The Washington Irving Campus is a public school building located at 40 Irving Place between East 16th and 17th Streets in the Gramercy Park neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City, near Union Square. Formerly the Washington Irving High School (until 2008), it now houses the Gramercy Arts High School, the High School for Language and Diplomacy (established 2009), the International High School at Union Square (established 2010), the Union Square Academy for Health Sciences (established 2012), and the Academy for Software Engineering (established 2012)—under the New York City Department of Education. One floor of the building houses the Success Academy Charter School.
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History
The school is named after writer Washington Irving. The building in which the school is located was designed by the architect C.B.J. Snyder and built in 1913. The original building is eight stories high, though the extension on 16th Street designed by Walter C. Martin and built in 1938, is eleven stories high.
The school had been located on Lafayette Street, but because the student population was growing at a rapid rate, a decision was made to move the school to another location, and land was purchased at 40 Irving Place. The school started out as a branch of Wadleigh High School, known at first as Girls' Technical High School, the first school for girls in the city. In 1913 the name changed to Washington Irving. On September 1986, the school became co-ed. Currently there are more than 2,000 students. In the period that Hector Xavier Monsegur (Sabu) attended Irving, 55% of the school's students graduated with their classes.
Closure and Success Academy Charter School
New York City DOE announced in December 2011 that WIHS would be one of two high schools to be closed by summer 2015. The school is to be replaced with Success Academy Charter School. Among the reasons for closing include a graduation rate of 48%.
The Success Academy Charter Schools planned to open an elementary school in the building in 2013. The site was suggested by the City Department of Education but the decision was not final until 2014. Washington Irving High School graduated its last class in June 2015 and beginning in early September, all of the second floor, and most of the third floor will be the site of Success Academy.
2016 fire incident
On February 25, 2016, a fire broke out in the building after an electrical explosion, resulting in the campus to be closed for an unspecified amount of time. All students and staff were relocated to another building.
Artwork
One enters the lobby through the main doors, which are opposite a grand decorative fireplace. It features a plaster bas-relief overmantel, The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, by sculptor Frances Grimes. Above the lobby's oak-paneled walls are 12 murals by Barry Faulkner depicting the early history of New York. The murals in the auditorium are by Robert Knight Ryland and J. Mortimer Lichtenauer. The murals in the stairwell are by Salvatore Lascari. On the second floor and above, the walls are white, the doors are red, and the floors are black. The exterior is limestone up to the second story, then gray brick trimmed with limestone. In front of the building, at the corner of Irving Place and 17th Street is a bust of Washington Irving by Friedrich Beer, which is featured on the school's ID. The exterior was used in the TV sit-com Head of the Class. The school's auditorium is located in the middle, between the left and the right wings. It is usually accessed only from the lobby, but has seats on the second level. There are many performances held at the auditorium, by students and outside artists.
Student life
Each day students enter the building from East 16th Street, swipe their ID cards, and go through metal detectors while their belongings go through a security X-ray scanner. As per the New York City Schools Chancellor's regulations, cell phones (cell phones may be allowed now under the De Blasio mayoral administration), MP3 players, and other electronic devices are banned in New York City public schools. In addition, students may no longer enter the building after 10:00 AM.