BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. – Want to have a teachers lounge named after you? Beverly Hills High School will let you do that.

As a way to raise money, the Beverly Hills Unified School District is offering a menu of items that can be named, including theater seats, the teachers lounge, streets, labs, trees, buildings and courtyards.

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Michael Libow, a Beverly Hills real estate agent, paid $35,000 to have a courtyard named after him. One of his competitors wasn’t happy.

“The school board has allowed Michael Libow to have a private billboard on public property,” Marty Halfon tells the L.A. Times.

Halfon believes Libow wanted to name the courtyard after himself because it garners a lot of foot traffic from parents – a prime potential clientele.

He also thinks the price tag was too cheap.

“Why did Michael Libow get an ‘A’ location for $35,000?” Halfon says, according to the paper.

The courtyard isn’t the only location named after Libow.

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There’s the Michael Libow Math Lab at Beverly Hills High, the Michael Libow Atrium at Beverly Vista Elementary and the Michael Libow Kindergarten Playspace at Hawthorne Elementary.

All told, those naming rights set him back another $74,750.

“I can never imagine being condemned by anyone for being charitable,” Libow says. “The city gives so much to me that I like to give back to the city. That’s my motivation. I’m a product of the city and its schools.”

Beverly Hills’ move, while unique, isn’t unprecedented. Other school districts scrambling for cash have been open to advertisers utilizing taxpayer-owned space to hawk products to a captive audience.

Last year, Indiana was considering a bill that would allow advertisements on the side of school buses.

The Zionsville district calculated it could raise about $60,000 selling advertisements on its 74 buses in the first year.

“We’ve done our homework, and we don’t think safety is an issue,” Mike Shafer, the district’s chief financial officer told the Indy Star. “We are hoping we can get a good selection of advertisers for this pilot project.”

CollegeInvest, a college savings program, paid about $30,000 to advertise on report cards sent home to students in Colorado’s Jefferson County Public School District, USA Today reported in 2012.

That’s peanuts compared to what Beverly Hills is poised to rake in.

Donors will have to pay $50,000 for an elementary school cafeteria, $500,000 for a planetarium, $1,000-$5,000 for a tree, depending on its location and size, $2.5 million for the high school’s front lawn and a whopping $10 million for a campus street.

“Some people prefer to donate anonymously, some people prefer to donate with a naming,” Ronit Stone, president of the school district’s foundation, tells the Times.

“You can’t walk a college campus, a hospital without seeing names on buildings.”