New Arizona Fine Arts School Reaches Construction Milestone

Construction of the new Hilltop School for the Arts and Theater in Litchfield Park, Ariz., recently hit a significant milestone, according to a news release. The Agua Fria High School District held a beam-signing ceremony to celebrate the building’s topping out, or the placement of its last structural beam. The district partnered with McCarthy Building Companies and ADM Group on the 115,111-square-foot facility.

Amenities are set to include two one-level classroom buildings and a two-story facility with a black box theater, cafeteria, administrative space, a media center, and more classroom space. The campus will also feature a 34,034-square-foot performing arts center including front-of-house space, a lobby, seating capacity of more than 700, and a back-of-house area with flex space and a food service area, according to the news release.

“The beam represents more than steel and signatures,” said Kristen Acton, Governing Board President for AFHSD. “It symbolizes our shared commitment to students, families, and this community. Every decision behind this project was made with learning, opportunity, and long-term impact in mind.”

Construction started in May 2025 and has an estimated completion date of fall 2026, and the full project cost about $74.5 million. McCarthy Building Companies served as general contractor, and ADM as designer.

“Most of all, we can’t wait to have students walk through these doors,” said Julie Jones, Hilltop School for the Arts and Theater Principal. “And as we sign this beam today, I am reminded that it is their courage to create, perform, and grow that is the heart of Hilltop. They are the ones who inspire us and remind us why this work matters.”

About the Author

Matt Jones is senior editor of Spaces4Learning. He can be reached at [email protected].

Featured

  • Architectural Power for the Modern Campus Landscape

    For generations, an outdoor classroom only required a textbook and a patch of grass. Today, not only has the laptop replaced the printed pages, the rise of agile learning has turned campuses into study halls with students listening to lectures and researching topics from quads, gardens, and plazas. The challenge for architects and facility managers is to provide connectivity without cluttering the landscape with visual eyesores or creating safety hazards with extension cords.

  • FGCU Breaks Ground on New Health Sciences Building

    Florida Gulf Coast University (FGCU) has launched construction on a major new academic facility that leaders say will reshape healthcare education in Southwest Florida for decades to come, according to university news.

  • Dallas ISD Voters Approve $6.2B Bond Package

    Dallas ISD voters have approved a record-setting $6.2-billion bond package that district leaders say will modernize aging campuses, eliminate portable classrooms and reshape learning environments across one of the nation’s largest school systems.

  • Deferred Maintenance Issues Growing at Universities, Gordian Reports

    U.S. colleges and universities are falling increasingly behind on facilities maintenance and repair, according to Gordian’s 13th annual State of Facilities in Higher Education report. The deferred capital renewal burden has reached $156 per gross square foot, an 8% increase over the previous year.