
As spring stretches toward summer, Longview Independent School District’s ambitious Bond 2024 projects are steadily moving from the drafting table to tangible progress, with major updates across multiple campuses and facilities.
While district leaders caution that construction is still in its early phases, they say the groundwork laid during months of design collaboration is already paying dividends.
“We’ve spent a lot of time getting this right on the front end,” said Mr. Paul Miller, Project Director for PROCEDEO. “Now you’re going to start seeing that discipline translate into real, visible progress.”
Tight Budgets, Strategic Adjustments
One of the clearest early signs of the district’s focus has been its financial stewardship.
According to Mr. Samuel Kington, LISD Chief Operations Officer, the Multipurpose Indoor Facility, slated for career-technical education, fine arts, and extracurricular training, recently completed design development reviews with preliminary estimates coming in $1.3 million under its $57.2 million construction cost limit. Meanwhile, the new Career and Technology Education (CTE) Center addition is trending nearly $2.3 million under budget.
“That doesn’t happen by accident,” said Mr. Kington. “It takes a team effort — architects, cost estimators, and construction managers, all pushing in the same direction.”
Not every project escaped cost pressures.
Mr. Mike Gipson, LISD Bond Construction Manager, acknowledged the Natatorium initially surfaced as a challenge after estimates came in significantly higher than anticipated.
“It’s a complex facility, and some of the ambitions for the site raised costs,” said Mr. Gipson. “But instead of panicking, we went straight into value engineering — structural options, HVAC efficiencies, site refinements. It’s a methodical process to protect the programming but respect the community’s investment.”
Superintendent Dr. Marla Sheppard emphasized the mindset behind those decisions.
“Our community invested in us,” she said. “We’re going to honor that by getting the absolute best product for every tax dollar they entrusted to us.”
Smart Redesigns & Tactical Pivots
Early design sessions also allowed the district to pivot strategically when the unexpected occurred.
At the Transportation and Operations Center site, engineers discovered an underground gas line during initial surveys. Instead of treating it as a setback, design teams quickly reimagined the site layout.
“We actually ended up with a better traffic flow and stronger parking organization,” said Mr. Kington. “Sometimes a surprise opens the door to an even better solution.”
A similar story unfolded at the Early Learning Center, where natural slope variations at the site presented a foundation design challenge.
“It would have been easy to over-engineer and overspend there,” said Mr. Mark Holsinger, lead architect from GFF. “But working closely with the district, we integrated the slope into a playful, kid-friendly site plan. It turned into a feature rather than a problem.”
Building Visibility & Community Confidence
Recognizing the importance of community trust, the district is preparing a slate of new visual materials for public release, including updated renderings and fly-through videos of major facilities.
Mr. Matthew Prosser, Chief of Strategic Initiatives, emphasized the intent behind the rollout.
“People are about to see these designs come alive,” Prosser said. “We want stakeholders to not just hear that progress is happening — we want them to see it, feel it, and know that their trust was well-placed.”
Renderings of the Multipurpose Center, Transportation Facility, and Early Learning Center are set for public viewing, alongside a digital fly-through animation of the Natatorium campus footprint — timed to coincide with key board and community meetings during the Spring and Summer months.
“These projects aren’t just construction sites,” Mr. Prosser added. “They’re investments in our students and our future.”
Navigating National Challenges
As construction sectors nationwide wrestle with inflation spikes, material shortages, and tariff uncertainties, Longview ISD’s early strategic planning has kept projects largely on stable footing.
“We built in escalation cushions from the start,” said Dr. Wayne Guidry, Chief Financial Officer. “We didn’t assume prices would stay static, and that foresight is giving us breathing room now.”
Mr. Miller added that while some market volatility remains — especially around steel and concrete — most critical orders have been timed to hedge against late-cycle inflation.
“The environment is volatile,” added. Mr. Miller, “but we aren’t scrambling because the team had the foresight to lock down the right pieces early.”
Gipson summed it up.
“There’s no such thing as a project without surprises,” he said. “The real test is how you manage through them — and this team is doing exactly that.”
From Vision to Reality
With schematic designs finalized, contractor orientations underway, and construction management systems humming into place, Longview ISD’s Bond 2024 program is shifting decisively from planning to execution.
"You're going to start seeing excavators, framing crews, and real vertical construction activity across our campuses," said Mr. John Erickson, owner-operator of E4 Construction. "We’re moving from blueprints to buildings."
Dr. Sheppard echoed that sentiment.
“We are right where we need to be,” she said. “We are stewarding these projects carefully, working the plan, and honoring the trust our voters placed in us. Now we move from vision to reality.”
District families can expect regular updates throughout the summer and fall as major milestones are reached.
For now, the district’s message remains simple: steady hands, clear eyes — and continued progress.