Memphis Archives - School Construction News https://schoolconstructionnews.com Design - Construction - Operations Mon, 30 Nov -001 00:00:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.7.11 Cambridge Rindge and Latin School Achieves LEED Gold https://schoolconstructionnews.com/2013/08/14/cambridge-rindge-and-latin-school-achieves-leed-gold/ CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — The U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) recently awarded LEED Gold certification to the renovated Cambridge Rindge and Latin School (CRLS).

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CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — The U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) recently awarded LEED Gold certification to the renovated Cambridge Rindge and Latin School (CRLS). Cambridge-based HMFH Architects and Milford, Mass.-based Consigli Construction collaborated on the $92 million project between June 2009 and September 2011.

The initial goal of the construction project was to “upgrade the aging HVAC system in the 400,000-square-foot complex,” said George Metzger, AIA, senior principal at HMFH Architects. Opportunities to address additional problems presented themselves as work began, however, and the project team adjusted the goals to “create a healthier learning environment and one better suited to the school’s educational program,” Metzger said. The team wanted to keep the school, situated on a visible civic block shared with the main library, recreation center and city park, in the same location to solidify its status as a significant element of the community.

The construction team kept several details in mind when working on the renovations. They used sustainable materials that were economically sound, designed for the long-term and would increase the quality of indoor air. Public spaces were also made brighter and easier to navigate with the removal of internal partitions that took up space and blocked visibility. A colorful terrazzo floor echoes the deco details on the 1932 portion of the building as well.

The fact that the construction team was renovating an occupied building posed a major problem during the renovation project. Available space in the city allowed the ninth-grade students to move off-campus for two academic years while the renovation process was underway. “With only three-quarters of the student population remaining in the building, the project team was able to isolate specific portions of the building for construction, without disrupting learning or compromising the safety of students and teachers,” Metzger said.

Another challenge the team faced was incorporating sustainable materials into the existing building. Metzger commented on this, saying, “While renovation (rather than new construction) is sustainable simply because an existing building is being used, it required thoughtful and creative approaches to replacing much of the inefficient infrastructure with systems that could be introduced into an existing structure that included concrete walls and ceilings in some portions of the complex.”

HMFH worked closely with the project’s mechanical engineer to incorporate a chilled beam heating and cooling system. This efficient system was easily installed in a structural environment that was not ideal. New and significantly more efficient lighting and plumbing fixtures, flooring and wall finishes were installed in the existing building as well.

Additional sustainable renovation techniques included installing rainwater barrels by the playground for water collection, diverting more than 95 percent of the construction waste materials away from landfills, using recycled and low-VOC materials and sustainable rubber flooring and installing operable windows.

The combination of these techniques decreased the school’s operating costs by more than $335,000 annually and reduced energy consumption by more than 1.3 million KWh of electricity, 44,000 therms of natural gas and 1.3 million gallons of water annually.

The renovated school, which shares its urban site with two other city-owned LEED Silver buildings — War Memorial Recreation Center and the Cambridge Public Library — completes the civic campus of sustainable buildings and aligns with the city’s sustainability initiatives.

“The high school project marked the end of a decade that saw almost constant construction on this site. Bound by two major city streets, the site remained open and accessible throughout all three projects. Now, with the completion of the third and final project, the citizens of Cambridge now enjoy a popular civic gem,” Metzger said.
 

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HMFH Architects Awarded Project of Distinction https://schoolconstructionnews.com/2013/07/25/hmfh-architects-awarded-project-distinction/ Concord, N.H.

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Concord, N.H. — With it’s colorful array of innovative and forward-thinking designs, Cambridge-based HMFH Architects was recently awarded a Project of Distinction Award from the Council of Education Facility Planners International (CEFPI) for their work on three elementary schools in Concord, N.H.
Considered exceptional and inspiring design by CEFPI, Abbot-Downing Elementary School, Christa McAuliffe Elementary School and Mill Brook Primary School were awarded Project of Distinction at the annual Northeast Region CEPI Exhibition of School Planning and Architecture. This year’s conference theme was educational renaissance.
“The layout is very different from most elementary schools and I think the jury saw that and wanted to bring that to other people’s recognition,” said Laura Wernick, AIA, LEED, senior principal at HMFH Architects and project director for the Concord elementary school projects. “This is a different way for schools to be organized that supports new thinking about how learning should take place in schools.”
The layout of each school is very much the same with the heart of each school being the multifunctioning learning commons. The learning commons of each school are situated in the center and surrounded by classrooms, which also have windows looking out into the corridor. The flexible facility includes spaces for group discussion, wet or messy projects, multimedia, amphitheater, story-telling, a book room, small project room and a reading nook for quiet, individual learning.
The deconstruction of the traditional library was the initial inspiration for the design, Wernick said.
“The idea is that instead of everyone going to a single library to do all these activities, let’s bring the libraries to the classrooms,” Wernick said. “This evolved over time into what became known as a learning commons.”
The firm relied upon the collaboration with the schools’ teachers and administrators in providing the most modern and inspiring educational designs to Concord area children. The design centered around three visionary ideas, which included that spaces should support collaborative learning; collaborative spaces should be easily accessible by faculty and students to integrate them into the day-to-day learning experience; and the spaces needed to provide a variety of flexible environments to support a range of learning activities.
“They saw that learning was happening in different ways,” Wernick said of the teachers and administrators of the schools. “They saw that technology was impacting how learning took place and they saw the library, and all the activities that took place there, as being too remote from the classrooms.”
The learning commons allows for a multitude of functions, from individual learning to whole grade levels coming together to collaborate on a project. This flexibility speaks to the educational theory that every child is different and requires different experiences in order to engage with their learning, Wernick said.
In designing the learning commons, HMFH paid special attention to the usage of natural light, provided quality acoustics and utilized different colors and patterns in the design to encourage creativity.
“At my firm we also believe very strongly that color and pattern and texture engage students because it helps make the space special,” Wernick said. “A place that’s colorful, has unusual patterns and images, and unusual special forms can help to inspire creativity in both the teachers and students while giving them a different way of thinking about problem solving.”
Acoustics are also essential to the design, Wernick said, because it is crucial that young children hear every word in instruction because it is more difficult for young students to gain context if they miss words.
The creative design of the learning commons at the three Concord, N.H. schools speaks to the mission of the areas educators and their emphasis on collaborative, inclusive and creative learning.
“If students are in a creative place they understand creativity is OK,” Wernick said. “When you’re sitting in rows in a very plain box space then you’re not being taught that creativity is fun, it’s part of life and it’s part of learning.”

 

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HMFH Architects Unveils New School https://schoolconstructionnews.com/2013/06/19/hmfh-architects-holds-groundbreaking-ceremony-new-elementary-school/ NEWBURYPORT, Mass. — Functional design meets community spirit in the new Bresnahan Elementary School. HMFH Architects, Inc., in conjunction with CTA Construction, meshed effective planning with elements of Newburyport’s heritage to design a school that will meet many of the community’s needs.

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NEWBURYPORT, Mass. — Functional design meets community spirit in the new Bresnahan Elementary School. HMFH Architects, Inc., in conjunction with CTA Construction, meshed effective planning with elements of Newburyport’s heritage to design a school that will meet many of the community’s needs. HMFH has demonstrated great architectural success for academic buildings, and the company’s designs feature user-friendly plans and dynamic colors.

A groundbreaking ceremony for the Bresnahan School was held on June 7, 2013. The space will span 112,000 square feet and is located next to the current elementary school. The project is more than just a new school, however—it will combine the preexisting schools for PK-K and grades 1-3 with Newburyport’s senior center as well. Not only does this help suit the town’s needs for updated facilities, but it will also help promote greater community integration with the space’s multifunctional design.

When asked about the design, Laura Wernick, AIA, REFP, LEED AP and senior principal at HMFH Architects said that the school “is based upon a model school that has been built twice previously. The model provides a very straightforward and cost-effective classroom wing with its own entrance attached to a core of shared spaces with a separate public entrance.” The natural landscape of the project site was taken into consideration as well. “The model was modified to use the naturally sloping site to great advantage,” Wernick said.

The new school is more than just an effectively designed multipurpose space, however. It will also feature key elements of Newburyport’s history and heritage. “Exterior materials were specifically selected to echo the appearance of Newburyport’s red brick and white trim historic downtown buildings,” Wernick said.

Aspects of the town’s maritime traditions were incorporated into the design as well: “The interior colors and patterns, including a full corridor-length terrazzo floor of sea creatures, schooners and constellations, were specially designed to connect students to the community’s maritime heritage.”

Wernick does anticipate facing some challenges as the project progresses. The construction team has already encountered difficulties attempting to design and construct a building right next to an occupied school. Wernick explained that the biggest challenge is yet to come, however: “The biggest test will occur as the project nears completion in 2014. The new school will open before all the demolition and site work will have been completed. The logistics of assuring safe movement of parents, students and busses onto and through the site where construction is still underway has been minutely thought through and will be particularly challenging.”

The school has been designed in compliance with the guidelines set by the Collaborative for High Performance Schools (CHPS) for status as a Verified Leader in Mass. This entails incorporating structural and design elements that foster environmental sustainability and high student performance. The project is expected to be complete by the start of the new school year in September 2014, and is estimated to cost $37,341,570.
 

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Designing Schools for 21st Century Learning https://schoolconstructionnews.com/2012/08/15/designing-schools-21st-century-learning/ School design is crucial in order to accommodate the changing needs of students, staff and teachers. Architects have been working side-by-side with school officials to deliver spaces that provide the best opportunities for student learning. With new technologies and innovative teaching methods, classroom spaces have become more than just desk-filled rooms. These new classroom designs feature flexible learning spaces that have the ability to take student learning to the next level.

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School design is crucial in order to accommodate the changing needs of students, staff and teachers. Architects have been working side-by-side with school officials to deliver spaces that provide the best opportunities for student learning. With new technologies and innovative teaching methods, classroom spaces have become more than just desk-filled rooms. These new classroom designs feature flexible learning spaces that have the ability to take student learning to the next level. I sat down with two well-known and experienced architects to get their thoughts on designing schools for 21st century learning and saw a trend that will hopefully only increase as more schools launch new construction and renovation projects.

Mark Quattrocchi, AIA, principal, Quattrocchi Kwok Architects
Since establishing Quattrocchi Kwok Architects in 1986, Mark Quattrocchi has designed numerous public and private projects. Highly knowledgeable in client responsive design, Quattrocchi has lectured at conferences and workshops, including the Coalition for Adequate School Housing, the California Association of Independent Schools, and a symposium on 21st century schools for the San Diego Unified School District.

Laura Wernick, AIA, REFP, LEED AP, senior principal, HMFH Architects Inc.
Laura Wernick is a senior principal with HMFH Architects Inc., a Cambridge, Mass., architecture firm focused on the academic market. A registered architect and Recognized Educational Facilities Planner, she is extremely active in the national dialogue on architecture and education.

Q: What does it mean to design schools for 21st century learning?
Quattrocchi: To answer that question, first you have to look back to what has been done before. If we look back at the late 19th to the 20th century, school designs were really more around a factory model. Students would start first grade on one side of the school and march their way through a series of boxes, sometimes referred to as cells and bells. A teacher gives the student the information, the student tests on it and moves on to the next grade. That may have worked well with some of the skills we expected from the workforce going off to college in parts of the 20th century, but if you look at 21st century skills and as an employer myself, the skills are very different now. Suddenly we look for teamwork, collaboration, critical thinking skills and problem solving. We look for different things in the workforce now, so we begin to question, ‘Should we look at the way we teach differently?’
It’s been researched and proven that standing up and lecturing on a topic to a student is the least effective way for students to learn. Everyone learns differently, so what we’ve seen is that maybe 21st century teaching should be finding a variety of ways to teach for students so they can better access information. So now, as an architect, it begins to make me ask the question, ‘Well, then do we design a classroom differently?’

If teachers are teaching differently and working with students in big groups, or if students are working in small groups, or if there’s peer-to-peer individualized learning and even technology-infused learning, that implies a very different type of space, so perhaps we need to look at a classroom in a very different fashion than we did before.

Wernick: It means that the school has been designed with an understanding of the latest neurological research on how we learn, and it means that the school has been designed to be energy efficient and sustainable. Brain research tells us that we learn best when we are actively constructing solutions to problems, particularly when there are hand/mind interactions.

We also know that different people learn in different ways, so we need a variety of spaces to support different learning styles and different size groups. These spaces should be manipulated easily, either with furniture or movable displays, providing space for both active and reflective learning and with opportunities for performance, movement, presentation, experimentation and a range of social interactions and collaborative exploration. It is also critical that the learning take place in an environment that is both interesting and a memorable place to inhabit.

Finally, having a school where natural lighting is used generously and wisely, and where there is a high degree of thermal comfort and indoor air quality, helps create a healthy and supportive environment for learning.

Q: What are some recent projects you’ve worked on and how have you designed these schools to fit the needs of 21st century learning environments?
Quattrocchi: There are a couple projects that I’ve worked on that really show how you can design a school for 21st century learning. A recent project we just completed was Ross School. One of the things we find is that when we sit down and ask teachers questions, any architect that is good at what he does, doesn’t design the last school he did and doesn’t design the school that he or she went to, but asks those teachers who are teaching and beginning to explore 21st century learning what would be different. So we grouped classrooms together, For example, when the third- and second-grade classrooms are clustered together as opposed to being in a row, there are connections between classrooms that allow teachers to begin to share. There are also common areas you can send students to and supervise them. So a group of students could be working on a project in this common area and there will be lots of eyes on what those kids are doing so they can function differently. Within the classrooms, there are greater opportunities for students to work in small groups while something else is happening in another part of the classroom.

Lastly, the use of technology, which I think is a huge part of what 21st century learning will end up being about. We’re seeing the use of interactive whiteboards — and you’ll see that at Ross School. If you really look towards the future, though, it’s really things like mobile devices, iPads and interactive television screens. In Corte Madera, Calif., we’re designing a school called the San Clemente School for the Larkspur/Corte Madera School District that will have about 450 students, but this school is uniquely different. At the Ross School they still have separate classrooms, although they are clustered around each other; at San Clemente School, when we sat down and began to talk to these teachers and the superintendent, they began to question even the notion of separate classrooms. So now what they’ll have is something we call ‘learning suites.’ This involves two teachers working together with anywhere from 40 to 50 students. So right away, it’s not a separate, self-contained classroom — we have two teachers collaborating and working with a bigger group of students, and that alone is a revolutionary shift.

For me, as an architect, it means a bigger space, but they challenged us by saying they wanted to hold a variety of activities simultaneously. They wanted the space big enough so they could gather the whole group of students, but they also wanted to be able to quickly move students if they want to break out in smaller groups or have students work on different projects. The design of the learning suites really became what the staff referred to as the ‘nooks and crannies’. The learning suites have the ability to be separated as well by a sliding glass wall, so if a large group needs to meet and make a lot of noise while a smaller group is working in the same space, you can divide the room in half to accommodate the needs of everyone.

Wernick: All of our schools are designed to meet or exceed all health and life safety codes. All of our schools are designed to exceed current energy codes. If schools are built to be energy efficient, flexible and to endure, then they will stand the test of time. Our Rashi School in Dedham, Mass., is a great example. The building is full of natural light. The plan is simple and clear and encourages informal interactions. There are a variety of both specifically programmed and more flexible spaces, allowing for a range of activities. The school is very welcoming to parents and the community. The materials are durable and easy to clean and the building is highly energy efficient. We make use of high-efficiency lighting, including LED lighting, sensors in classrooms to minimize artificial light, as well as efficient variable drive motors and low-flow fixtures, among other energy saving components. The building is designed for photovoltaic panels.

We are just completing three new elementary schools in Concord, N.H. The classrooms are designed around an open, sky-lit Learning Commons containing a range of spaces for collaborative learning, for project-based activities, for storytelling and for media presentations. The Learning Commons are colorful, dynamic and filled with natural light. With different colored tiles creating rhythm and pattern and playing off warm wood paneling, the schools are both memorable for the children but also designed with the adult in mind. The building is infused throughout with technology. Learning will happen everywhere. Teachers will no longer be constrained by the four walls of their classrooms and parents will be encouraged to participate in activities taking place in the Learning Commons. By creating options for teaching and learning, the faculty is able to assure that every child is able to reach his or her potential.

Q: When did you first start seeing a change in design and realize that designing schools for 21st century leaning was something that really needed to be addressed?
Quattrocchi: I started seeing this as early as the mid-90s. My first real experience with this was with two high schools we were designing around the same time: one school in San Juan Batista, Calif., called Anzar High School and also Windsor High School in Windsor, Calif. Instead of having departmentalized classrooms where every subject was in a certain area and none of the classrooms really met, these schools had a different idea. The teachers started thinking maybe it would be better if we group a smaller group of students in clusters that they call a Small Learning Community (SLC) and move all those decentralized spaces into a series of these SLCs. At Anzar and Windsor High School, there are four small SLCs, and in each one they have science classrooms and then a variety of general classrooms that are used by history, language arts and math teachers. The SLCs made it so the teachers could work together, talk about the students and teach across the curriculum. It’s a much more integrated learning environment, and that was really my first experience with seeing that teachers weren’t quite working in the same way that they used to.

Wernick: School design is always evolving. Certainly in the past 10 years there have been enormous changes simply due to the growing importance of technology and the evolution of the computer from large desktop to handheld device. The ability to support technology in the classroom and to support collaborative use of technology is continuing to impact how schools are designed. A growing awareness of energy efficiency has resulted in new materials and systems that have impacted school design. For example, everything from rapidly renewable materials to daylight dimming sensors to LED lighting is now common within schools.

Equally important, the neurological knowledge of how the brain learns has grown significantly in the last decade, allowing us to better shape the environment to support the activities and experiences that most directly impact learning.

Q: In your opinion, how does design impact student learning?
Quattrocchi: One of the roles of an architect is to listen very carefully to the people we design for to see that the things they want work best for them. In order to have a design that really works, I observe the teachers in their current atmosphere and see how they teach, so I could find a way to translate the language of education into the language of building.

Some teachers that I’ve come across were working in portables, which are some of the most inflexible and unattractive spaces to work in, and these teachers were doing outstanding work in a series of portables. The lesson to me was: Architecture doesn’t make good teachers, but we can do a lot to help support teachers do good teaching. So if I spent time with them and see how they do it and understand what their needs are, maybe I can make a whole different kind of classroom than we’re all sort of used to making before.

Wernick: Research has shown that good natural light and views of the outdoors, as well as good thermal comfort, directly impact a student’s ability to learn. There is also evidence showing that students learn best through active problem solving, hands-on project-based activities and collaborative interactions with others. Schools can be designed to better support these types of learning modes.

Q: When you start a project now, what are some of the "must-haves" schools tell you they need in the design? How is this different from say, five or10 years ago?
Quattrocchi: The things that I hear the most for 21st century learning environments is having highly flexible and adaptable spaces. They want to be able to manipulate the room to accommodate a whole variety of different ways for students to work. Furniture is a big concern and it’s hard to believe that would be an issue, but while talking to teachers they say, ’I would do more of this but my tables are so hard to move and it’s such a hassle.’ Using furniture on wheels is a great way to solve this and we’ve done this in other school designs before, including American Canyon High School in American Canyon, Calif.

Teachers also want the ability to change the room and that could be by incorporating a divider in the classroom. This way, students can break out in smaller groups quickly without having to move to a different room. Teachers also wanted to break away from the ’teaching wall,’ which just means they didn’t want a designated area to teach, but instead maneuver around the classroom and teach from all angles.

Wernick: The must-haves include areas for project-based learning and either learning commons or libraries that are designed to support a range of activities including collaborative use of technology, presentation, social interactions and project areas. These are taking the place of more traditional libraries, particularly as the density of books required declines and the need for active problem solving increases.
More flexible and more soft furnishings are now being requested. Dedicated computer rooms are rarely requested as computers become smaller and access to computers is more ubiquitous.

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