Piedmont High School has an open campus, by which students can leave during
brunch, lunch, and unscheduled periods. The campus is between Piedmont Park on the right of the school and
Piedmont Middle School and Witter Field on the left. The center of campus is a grassy area referred to as "the quad." The quad connects the former site of the Alan Harvey Theatre, the library, the cafeteria and student center, and the amphitheater. Classrooms are scattered around campus, with the music and social studies buildings the furthest apart. The campus was originally built on a portion of Piedmont Park, and dog-walking trails behind the school connect to the park.
Architecture The school was built in 1921 in a
neoclassical design, part of the same plan that built the Piedmont city's
Exedra. Since its designed by architect
W.H. Weeks, Reconstruction in the 1970s reflected the "back-to-nature" look popular at the time, using wood instead of shingles. The school's "breezeway," an open, wide corridor running between the school's main buildings, exemplified this. During the 2003-2004 school year, the gymnasium was expanded to include an entrance room that also displays trophies. The school has undergone further construction following Measure E, which issued $56 million in bonds for the reconstruction of school facilities to meet earthquake safety guidelines.. More recently, the old theater and social studies buildings were demolished, and replaced with a three-story STEAM building (housing classes in science, math, engineering, and art) along with a new Alan J. Harvey Theater which includes both a proscenium theater and an upstairs black box theater and classrooms. ==Academics==