The first day of school was full of energy and excitement! Students and staff were happy to be back, catching up with friends and diving into a new year. These are a few moments captured from the day.
Ever wonder what it takes to replace an aging school with a new campus? This behind-the-scenes look takes you from blueprint to bell ring.
“Constructing a new school is more than just putting up walls,” Davis School District Facilities Administration Administrator Weston Weekes said. “It’s years of planning, teamwork and coordination to ensure every detail supports our students and staff.”
The video follows the full journey—design meetings, demolition, salvaging reusable materials, moving day and the final touches that make a school ready for students. You’ll see how architects, construction crews, principals and district departments come together to make each transition smooth.
“One of the most unique parts of this process is seeing teachers, staff and even families pitch in to prepare classrooms,” Sunset Junior High Principal Tami Oliver said. “It truly takes the whole community to get a school ready for opening day.”
From salvaging furniture to training kitchen staff, every piece of the puzzle plays a role in creating safe and innovative learning spaces. This work reflects thousands of hours, countless hands and a commitment to student success.
“At the end of the day, the goal is simple,” Davis School District Architecture & New Construction Director Bryan Turner said. “We want to provide schools that are safe, welcoming and designed for incredible learning opportunities.”
Since 2011, Jodi Lunt has led Davis Education Foundation with a clear promise: remove barriers so students can stay in school and on a path to graduation. She built partnerships, rallied volunteers, and focused every dollar on students, classrooms and teachers. The result is a stronger, kinder network of support for families across our district.
Under her tenure, Davis Education Foundation has invested over $64 million in students, classrooms and teachers—investment that helped build 10 Teen Resource Centers across our high schools and deliver a Teen Living Center that opens a safe door for students in crisis.
Under Jodi’s leadership the foundation grew from a small grantmaker into a full-service partner for schools. Teen Resource Centers now stand in our high schools, the Teen Living Center opened its doors to students in crisis, and classroom grants flow to teachers who turn ideas into daily learning. Jodi never chased headlines. She chased outcomes—food on a table, shoes on a kindergartner, a scholarship letter in a mailbox, a student who shows up tomorrow because someone showed up today.
Her legacy is not programs on paper. It is students who felt seen, teachers who felt backed, and a community that said yes when a child needed help. On behalf of Davis School District, we celebrate Jodi’s retirement and offer deep thanks for the work she started and the standard she set.
Jodi’s work reminds us what school communities can do together—open one more door, lift one more student, build one more future. We are grateful for her leadership and wish her every good thing in the years ahead.