West Virginia

Hogwarts-like abandoned West Virginia school purchased by students to revitalize town

GRANTSVILLE, W.Va., Oct. 7, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- Followers of the "Best of Zillow" Twitter account went wild when 100-year-old Calhoun High School was listed for sale in Grantsville, West Virginia earlier this year. The abandoned building's Harry Potteresque structure was fodder for Twitter users speculating about potential occupants and uses, human world and otherwise.

It ignited an idea, a very large idea of how we could use the school to revitalize our community

"It caused such a big commotion," explained Crystal Mersh, president of the school's graduating class of 1982, "that it ignited an idea, a very large idea of how we could use the school to revitalize our community and create a model to be followed by other small towns in Appalachia." Mersh, CEO of a global management consulting company, donated $1 million to jumpstart the project. 

The 1982 Foundation, led by Mersh, is now the proud owner of the castle-like structure with the storied past and the bright future. The school will be turned into a self-funding, mixed-use community center with classrooms, meeting rooms, AirBnb hotel rooms, office space for lease, a gym, a swimming pool, and a day care. The center will host summer and afterschool programs, such as STEM day camps to foster children's desire to learn and to introduce them to opportunities for their futures. Labor and materials for the project will be locally sourced as much as possible, injecting a much-needed source of work for the local merchants and tradesmen. 

"Over the past forty years," noted Mersh, "Calhoun County has fallen on hard times as a result of the lack of good jobs, the opioid epidemic and lack of infrastructure to support growth. We are hopeful this model can be a model for many Appalachia small towns to rally and restore their communities."

West Virginia's Speaker of the House of Delegates, Roger Hanshaw, and Secretary of Economic Development, Mitch Carmichael, are confirmed to attend the brick-breaking event and the 800-person festival on October 9 in the building's honor. Mersh's grandfather helped lay the original bricks for the building 100 years ago in 1921.

"We have excellent support from the community," said Mersh, "The center is by far the biggest thing to have happened in Calhoun County for a very long time."

Mersh, who went to nearby Fairmont State after graduating, credits "the fine people of this county for instilling values, hope, and dreams that are hard to find. All of us at the 1982 Foundation want that same kind of growing-up experience for the kids of this area for many years to come."

ABOUT: The 1982 Foundation is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit with the goal of revitalizing Calhoun County through the creation of a self-funding mixed-use community center. More details are available on the public Facebook page for The 1982 Foundation "Calhoun County Community Center" (https://www.facebook.com/groups/872475373372584).

Media Contact:
Michelle Fishburne
919-247-0384
[email protected]

 

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SOURCE The 1982 Foundation