
Lewisville ISD trustees are lining up a hefty construction vote, with roughly $112.5 million in guaranteed maximum prices on the table for repairs, renovations and athletic upgrades across eight campuses at the board’s Feb. 9 meeting.
The proposed package spans long-term life-cycle work at several elementary schools, a major 20-year renovation at Lewisville High School Killough, new athletic locker-room space at two high schools and a full roof replacement. If the consent agenda item passes, district administrators will be cleared to lock in contracts and map out construction schedules, according to the Lewisville ISD board agenda.
Per the board documents, trustees will review guaranteed maximum prices for work at Flower Mound Elementary, Hebron Valley Elementary, LHS Killough, Rockbrook Elementary, Vickery Elementary, Timber Creek Elementary’s roof replacement, and locker-room additions at Marcus and Flower Mound high schools. All of it is bundled into the Feb. 9 regular meeting consent calendar at the district’s administrative center.
What's in the $112.5M package
A report from Executive Director of Construction Randy Fite pegs the total guaranteed maximum prices at about $112.5 million. The single largest item is the Lewisville High School Killough 20-year renovation, at just over $34 million. Flower Mound Elementary’s project comes in at roughly $18.3 million, Hebron Valley at about $16.4 million, Rockbrook at around $16.8 million and Vickery at about $15 million.
The same report lists a Timber Creek Elementary roof replacement near $2.7 million. On the athletics side, the package includes a $3.3 million Marcus High School locker room and a roughly $5.7 million baseball and softball locker-room project at Flower Mound High School, according to Community Impact.
Budget shifts and the district's explanation
Fite’s report shows the numbers did not land perfectly on target at every campus. Flower Mound Elementary is about $1.7 million over budget, driven by added HVAC structural support, moving playground equipment out of a floodplain and building a new front entrance canopy. Hebron Valley came in about $2.7 million under budget, while Killough is about $2.8 million under, according to Community Impact.
"I would commend the design team, we had a lot of design meetings," Fite told trustees, noting that small savings can add up quickly on large projects. District staff said they plan to shift savings where possible to cover overruns and present the guaranteed maximum prices as consent items to keep the approval process moving.
Timeline and what's next
If trustees sign off on the consent agenda Feb. 9, administrators will be authorized to finalize contracts and start lining up construction timelines, with several maintenance-heavy projects expected to kick off this summer, according to the Lewisville ISD board packet.
The board packet and detailed guaranteed maximum price attachments are posted on the district’s public meetings portal for residents who want a closer look at scope and budgets. The Feb. 9 regular meeting at the LISD Administrative Center will include the consent vote on the full $112.5 million package.









