The Robb Elementary School, where 19 students and two teachers were gunned down, is to be demolished.
High school dropout Salvador Ramos, went on a murderous rampage at the school in Uvalde in south western Texas last month.
And so devastated is the small close-knit community by the tragedy that the decision has now been taken to close the school and destroy it.
At a City of Uvalde council news conference, in response to a question, the mayor Don McLaughlin confirmed the demolition. But he added there was no exact timeline yet, for it to happen.
The news come just hours after it was revealed there were enough armed police to stop Ramos three minutes after he entered the school.
Steven McCraw, director of the Texas Department of Public Safety, called the response an “abject failure” with “terrible decisions” made by the on-site commander.
He reiterated his previous assertion that as many as 19 officers had waited over an hour in a corridor outside classrooms before a special Border Force team entered and killed the gunman.
Uvalde school gunman could have been neutralised ‘in three minutes’ and police did not check door was locked, says Texas safety chief
Uvalde shooting: Officers had rifles and a ballistic shield on site in minutes — but still waited an hour to enter classroom, says new report
Texas school shooting: Police officer armed with rifle ‘passed up chance to shoot Uvalde gunman’
Nineteen children in grade four – aged 11 and 12 – and two teachers were killed in the 24 May attack.
Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, was torn down after a gunman’s rampage in December 2012 led to the death of 26 people – 20 children between six and seven years old, and six adult staff members.