Construction on a new St. Croix Central High School building officially began this week, marking a significant step in the Virgin Islands’ post-disaster recovery efforts and signaling what could become a territory-wide push to modernize aging school facilities.
The groundbreaking ceremony, held Tuesday, April 21, brought together the Virgin Islands Department of Education, the construction partnership of Consigli and Benton, and the Office of Disaster Recovery to formally launch the project. The new facility will replace infrastructure damaged during recent hurricanes and represent one of the most visible symbols of the territory’s reconstruction priorities.
Why This Matters Now
For families across St. Croix and beyond, the project represents more than a new building. It signals government willingness to invest in education infrastructure after years of deferred maintenance and hurricane-related damage that left many USVI schools operating in substandard conditions. The success or failure of this high school rebuild could determine the pace of similar upgrades across the island chain.
St. Thomas residents, in particular, face similar challenges with aging school buildings and hurricane damage. Officials have indicated that lessons learned from the St. Croix project will inform future decisions about education facility investments on St. Thomas and Water Island.
From Damage to Reconstruction
Like many public facilities across the USVI, St. Croix Central High suffered significant damage from recent hurricane seasons. Rather than pursue temporary fixes, territorial officials chose a full reconstruction approach, partnering with experienced construction firms to oversee the project from groundbreaking through completion.
The Office of Disaster Recovery, which has overseen much of the territory’s post-hurricane rebuilding efforts, is playing a central role in coordinating funding, permitting, and project oversight. This involvement suggests the project will receive priority status and sustained attention from recovery officials.
Construction Partnership and Timeline
The Consigli and Benton joint venture brings substantial construction experience to the project. Both firms have worked on large-scale institutional projects and hurricane recovery efforts in other jurisdictions, according to publicly available information about their portfolios.
The Department of Education has not yet publicly released detailed timelines or final construction budgets, though the government indicated that federal disaster recovery funding will support much of the project cost. Early estimates suggest the rebuild could take two to three years, depending on permitting and supply chain factors common to island construction projects.
Broader Infrastructure Questions
The St. Croix Central High rebuild occurs against a backdrop of aging infrastructure across the USVI education system. Schools on St. Thomas, St. John, and Water Island face similar challenges: aging HVAC systems, outdated electrical service, roof repairs, and hurricane hardening needs.
Education officials have indicated that the territory hopes to use lessons from the St. Croix project to develop a phased approach to similar improvements elsewhere. Whether additional schools will receive comparable investment depends on future federal funding availability and shifting recovery priorities.
The project also reflects broader territorial recovery strategy. Since 2017, the USVI has pursued a mixed approach: some facilities have received substantial modern upgrades, while others have been maintained with minimal improvements. The decision to fully reconstruct St. Croix Central High rather than renovate signals a potential shift toward more ambitious infrastructure goals.
What Comes Next
With construction officially underway, the next phase involves site preparation, permitting finalization, and actual building work. The Department of Education plans to maintain student operations at temporary or existing facilities during the rebuild period.
As St. Croix Central High takes shape over the coming years, the USVI will be watching closely—not just to see if the school opens on time and within budget, but to understand whether this project represents the beginning of a sustained, territory-wide commitment to modernizing education infrastructure or a one-time investment driven by federal disaster funding availability.










