Tag: design

School District of Springfield Township Marks the Beginning of Their New Early Learning Center Construction with a Groundbreaking Ceremony

SCHRADERGROUP attended School District of Springfield Township’s groundbreaking ceremony for the new K-2 Early Learning Center in Erdenheim, Pennsylvania.

More than 200 people from the community joined the School District to celebrate the groundbreaking for the new school. Big smiles radiated from all as Board Members, Project Team Members, Parents and future students dug into the site with their hard hats on. Dr. Nancy Hacker, Superintendent of schools, thanked the community and those who have worked diligently on the new school for their efforts. She, fellow Board Members and local representatives expressed appreciation for the teamwork required to get to this point.

SCHRADERGROUP is equally grateful and excited for this project’s success and will diligently continue to support its journey.

Check out our project page on this highly anticipated project here.

SCHRADERGROUP Senior Project Manager attends Hatboro-Horsham School District Community Networking Event

The Hatboro-Horsham School District hosted a Business Networking and Partnership Event at the Hatboro-Horsham High School. SCHRADERGROUP’s Senior Project Manager, Danielle V. Hoffer, joined community business leaders in the area to share what is happening in the District and to personally experience the “WOW” teachers and students are creating in the classrooms and beyond. Principal Dennis Williams engaged the group in a team building exercise and spoke eloquently on the future of education and how learning styles have changed to prepare students for the future workforce.

Superintendent Dr. Curtis Griffin was excited to present the design of the new Crooked Billet Elementary School. Working with the SCHRADERGROUP team (led by Managing Partner, David Schrader, Danielle V. Hoffer and Project Manager, Devin Bradbury), the new school was designed to respond to project-based learning styles with small and large group collaboration areas in the academic wing. The public areas, including the gymnasium and cafeteria with a central stage, offer space for a variety of school and public venues. The old Crooked Billet Elementary School has already been demolished and the new building is starting to come up out of the ground.

Just one of the many positive changes that is happening in the Hatboro-Horsham School District that SCHRADERGROUP is excited about.

Check out Crooked Billet’s Groundbreaking event here.

And our project page on Crooked Billet here.

SCHRADERGROUP participates in an exciting Groundbreaking Ceremony for the New Crooked Billet Elementary School in the Hatboro-Horsham School District

SCHRADERGROUP is excited to have attended the Hatboro-Horsham School District’s Groundbreaking Ceremony for the District’s New Crooked Billet Elementary School.

Marking the beginning of the construction process for the new school, the School District and Community are excited to begin the journey to welcome students to the facility in 2020. The Crooked Billet Elementary School has a special place in the heart of its local community, being a place of history and a home for many.

The proposed facility is exciting in several ways.  The Crooked Billet monument and the history rotunda will commemorate the Revolutionary War event that the school is named after.  Students will enter the building by passing the monument and then will be immersed in history in the central rotunda.  Once in the learning environment clusters, students will be greeted by teachers in 21st century learning environments consisting of team project areas surrounded by classroom and small group spaces.  This facility is truly revolutionary in a multitude of ways!

The SG team is pleased to partner with the Hatboro-Horsham School District and the community on this highly anticipated educational facility.

You can watch HHSD’s Groundbreaking Ceremony here.

Congratulations to the Council Rock School District on its Newly Renovated Holland Middle School!

SCHRADERGROUP is excited to have attended Council Rock School District’s Dedication Ceremony for the newly renovated Holland Middle School.

Dr. Robert Fraser, the Superintendent of Schools for Council Rock School District, articulated it best when he welcomed the audience to the “newly renovated, expanded and beautiful”–Holland Middle School… A school that belongs to everyone at the Council Rock Community and a school to be proud of”.

This project represents a tremendous transformation.  Many areas of the facility were stripped to the concrete structure and rebuilt as a contemporary facility with 21st Century Learning spaces. Program additions to the current middle school include: an auditorium with balcony seating, new spaces for music, an auxiliary gymnasium, fitness room, additional classrooms and a new administration area. The interior of the building was completely renovated while the exterior of the building was updated with a new, contemporary skin—with new windows that introduce daylight throughout the facility.

SG is proud to have had the opportunity to partner with the Council Rock School District, to design a LEED Gold certified learning environment.  The students of the Council Rock School District deserve this facility!

You can watch Dr. Fraser’s speech here.

SCHRADERGROUP Receives an Award of “Outstanding Project” in Learning by Design’s Fall Issue for the Phoenixville Area School District’s Early Learning Center and Manavon Elementary School

Phoenixville Area School District (PASD)’s Early Learning Center and Manavon Elementary School received an Outstanding Project award in Learning by Design’s Fall issue.

Learning by Design is…

“…the premier source for education design and innovation excellence. Published three times each year in April, June and October, this prestigious magazine recognizes the nation’s preeminent architectural firms by publishing outstanding pre-K to 12 and college/university projects.”

The new 152,000 SF Early Learning Center and Elementary School is designed to support two specific grade structures in a “school within a school” format: Grades K-1 in an Early Learning Center, and Elementary grades 2-5. The new building was opened in 2017 and has been very well received by the community.

A primary goal for the facility is to create a focus on literacy and learning in a non-standard learning environment.  In response, the design places the media and technology center at the core of the facility with all other functions radiating from it. This balance of the building seeks to minimize circulation space by maximize the use of those areas as learning environment.

SG is proud to have partnered with PASD on this ground breaking project.

Read more and see more photos of the Phoenixville Area Early Learning Center and Manavon Elementary School here.

You can read the Learning by Design Fall issue here.

What We Understand About the Next Generation of Learning Environments

by David L. Schrader, AIA, LEED AP, LE Fellow

Globally, the learning process is evolving at different rates.  With respect to change in the educational process, the old idioms that apply are: “The more things change, the more they stay the same,” and “Change is inevitable.”  These opposing thoughts can reflect that differing rate of learning process as it evolves throughout the world.  And yet, learning spaces must somehow universally provide the container within which learning occurs, regardless of the evolution of the educational process.

As planners and designers, the best that we can do to react to this confusing rate of change is to provide for flexibility.  Flexibility does not necessarily need to mean large, open, sterile spaces.  Evolving educational trends are marrying flexibility in space through a wide variety of solutions.  Internationally, we are seeing spaces that provide for varying opportunities for learning.

Among important learner traits for the future, researchers say that the next generation of learners will grow to their fullest potential if their educational experience includes honing their skills in the “Four-C’s”: Communication, Collaboration, Creativity, and Critical Thinking.  The “Four C’s” require that the learner be provided with spaces for instruction, research, development of projects (making), and presentation of ideas.  In support of these learning styles, we are seeing a move towards flexibility that makes the most use of space, and supports intriguing solutions that include but are not limited to the following:

STE(A)M Centers – What conversation about next generation learning environments would be complete without mention of STE(A)M (Science, Technology, Engineering, Art and Math).  The tradition of a science lab in a cluster or in a department, an art room in the visual or performing arts hallway, and the technology education space down by the loading dock is no longer.  Fresh clusters of technology spaces gathered around a central project area have replaced those old configurations with the intent of inspiring technological growth for our learners, thus promoting an increase in those entering the technology fields so critical to the world’s development.

Student Commons – Combining public interest in more efficient footprints with stimulating social opportunities drives this merging of space.  Treatment of the library and cafeteria as spaces used only three periods per day no longer makes sense when confronted with the need to create more efficient multi-use spaces.  The commons are an any type of learning-anytime-anywhere space, supporting the various social interaction levels required by today’s learner and their technological needs.  While commons are borrowed from their big brother in the higher education setting, when designed correctly with technology integrated, they have a commanding place in the K-12 environment.

Elimination of circulation space – School Districts have the interesting challenge of continuing to provide for new and often-mandated programs within the space developed for an educational program of the past.  District budgets cry for providing less building square footage than previously available.  Internationally, planners and designers are reacting to this unique challenge by further utilizing every square inch of the plan.  With the elimination of corridors, the space previously reserved for circulation throughout the building becomes educational or social space.  Imaginative solutions to this issue often become the most unique areas of the building.

Elimination of specific learning support and special needs spaces – To eliminate the stigma attached to “going to the space” for those students requiring these services, movement to a push-in environment has become a matter of equity. Everyone is familiar with walking down the hallway of a building of the past and finding educators sitting with individual students outside of the classroom or in custodial closets delivering support learning.  The next generation of spaces replaces circulation space with small group and teaming areas throughout the building.  Further, with the exception of the most severe of needs, many learning support spaces are being eliminated and are now pushed in to a small group space connected to the classroom or within very close proximity.  The “owned” learning support space is being abandoned in favor of a push-in structure with a centralized learning support office area for the educators to call home.

Blending of building communal spaces The Four C’s require that we begin to offer a certain amount of freedom to the student previously not provided in a typical floor plan.  Spaces for students to congregate in all levels of social structure from the individual research space to the small group gathering space to the large group interaction space must all be provided as if the learners were gathering in a small town.  The more we begin to think about the aggregate of students integrating in the various social groupings provided by the balance of their social settings outside of school, the more successful we will be at replicating the space required for a true social learning environment.

Support of the Four C’ s through new spaces for researching, communing, building, making, learning, and presentation – Planners and designers have begun to recognize that the typically structured 750-1000 s.f. rectangular classroom with 22-30 desks facing a learning surface gathered on both sides of a hallway is no longer adequate for the next generation. We can now begin to investigate customized and flexible spaces that allow for these specific areas of development.  Technological support spaces for research, commons areas for project development and socialization, maker spaces for production, and presentation areas for the conveying of student knowledge will become the new vocabulary of spaces around which a learning community will be built. These spaces and many other new and unique environments, influenced by higher education and industry, will become the new norms around which planners and designers of the next generation will base their work.

Architects and planners are globally are developing designs and integrating these unique uses of space in educational facilities for the next generation of learning.  The educational outcomes of these many solutions are also being studied for their educational relevance (educational commissioning) by many. As planners and designers, we do recognize that “with change, things will not stay the same!”

Upper Merion Area School District Welcomes Two New Elementary Schools with Excitement to Their Portfolio of Excellent Learning Environments

SCHRADERGROUP (SG) attends Upper Merion Area School District (UMASD)’s ribbon cutting for new elementary schools, Caley and Gulph.

UMASD welcomed two new elementary schools, Caley Elementary and Gulph Elementary, to their portfolio of excellent learning environments with excitement at their ribbon cutting last week.

SG is proud to be the architect for these two exciting, new elementary schools. The new schools will replace the existing Caley Elementary School and Gulph School facilities, which were originally constructed in the 1960’s and no longer accommodated the District’s enrollment or educational program.

Caley and Gulph were received by the School District and public with enthusiasm. Superintendent of Schools, Dr. John Toleno, and the District Board Member-President, Alice Hope praised the design team for “capturing what we needed for the district.” The buildings represent the culmination of a journey that started with design workshops that includes students, faculty and public conceptualizing their ultimate learning environment and culmination in these wonderful spaces for future generations to absorb knowledge.

SG is grateful for the opportunity to design learning environments with such vision. The team looks forward to continuing to support the District in its future visions.

You can take a virtual tour of the schools on the UMASD website here and also watch the ribbon cutting (Caley and Gulph.)

Read more about Caley and Gulph here.

SCHRADERGROUP Receives AIA AAJ Award for Pennsylvania State Emergency Operations Center

SCHRADERGROUP is proud to announce that their recently completed project, the New State Emergency Operations Center for Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency (PEMA), has been selected as a recipient for the 2018 AIA AAJ Justice Facilities Review. The project was selected for publication based on its quality of form, functionality, and current architectural response to complex justice design issues. The AIA AAJ Justice Facilities Review jury commented, “The efficiencies of co-locating multiple agencies offers positive efficiencies. The building organization favors placing day-to-day activities along the perimeter, favoring light and view for those in the facility on a daily basis.”

SG, in a joint venture with AECOM Technology Corporation (AECOM), completed the new, approximately 145,000 SF State Emergency Operations Center (SEOC) serving as a home for many of the State’s emergency response functions.  In addition to ensuring the supply of continuous power and communication that is necessary for the SEOC, the design team provided a building that is reinforced and secure for emergency staff.  The new facility provides dedicated emergency services and disaster assistance for the state, with the ability to sustain uninterrupted operations during activations.

In addition to the SEOC, the facility provides ergonomically-designed office space for all PEMA administrative departments, as well as partner organizations and integrated functions such as the Office of the State Fire Marshal, and the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation (PennDOT) Traffic Management.  The complex also supports a Tier 3 data center, media briefing, training facilities, and protected storage for PEMA operations vehicles.

Design for this facility follows sustainability guidelines, as understood by the US Green Building Council’s LEED certification process. PEMA has achieved a LEED certified rating. All programming, planning and site master planning preceding the design portion of the project also was completed by SG/AECOM.

The facility was a recipient of the same Justice Facilities Review award in 2014, prior to construction. The team is honored to receive an additional award for the completed project.

See more photos of the PEMA project here.

See the AIA AAJ Justice Facilities Review page here.

SCHRADERGROUP’s Bristol Township School District Projects Featured in Sherwin William’s STIR® Magazine

SCHRADERGROUP (SG)’s Bristol Township School District (BTSD) Brookwood, Mill Creek and Keystone Elementary Schools are featured in Sherwin William’s STIR® magazine (special issue 2018.)

STIR magazine is…

“…the resource that explores the connection between color and cutting-edge design. It examines the many facets of color to help you bring a fresh perspective to your work. STIR® is a print magazine and email newsletter for design professionals.”

In the article, SG’s Managing Partner, David Schrader, describes how the finishes in these newly constructed BTSD elementary schools are used to create an environment that is brighter, lighter, exciting and stimulating to the students using them.

The spaces in these massive buildings are broken up using colors and shapes that act as wayfinding tools for the users of the building. All three schools share the same floor plan but each school has a different unique color palette of its own. The hues chosen for the schools is soft-toned to create a calming effect on children.

SG’s goal for these buildings was to create an inviting and beautiful environment that the District and its children are proud of—and the reception of these learning environments has been extremely positive.

Learn more about the Bristol Township School District Elementary Schools here.

You can read this whole magazine issue on the web here.