Special Report
School Climate & Safety

Showcasing Creativity in School Construction

By Michelle R. Davis — November 28, 2017 5 min read
The Nest, a common area at Discovery Elementary School in Arlington, Va., was conceptualized, designed and built by students.
  • Save to favorites
  • Print

New school designs are supporting the academic goals of educators—and in some cases, pushing the boundaries of K-12 architecture.

Flexible learning spaces, enhanced technology, environmentally friendly features, and co-location are all characteristics being incorporated into innovative new school buildings and projects.

“Schools are actually becoming more sophisticated learning environments,” said John Dale, a principal and studio leader at the architecture firm Harley Ellis Devereaux, based in Los Angeles. “They’re more nuanced and doing a better job at taking into account the different ways in which learning takes place.”

“Green schools,” for example, save energy and money, and often educate students about their methods and provide opportunities for study. New buildings that move away from long hallways with closed classrooms toward more interactive spaces promote collaboration around instruction and learning.

One of the hottest trends in new school construction is co-location, said Sarah Luchs, a program officer at Next Generation Learning Challenges, which often works with schools that are transforming academically—and sometimes architecturally.

Schools are being built on the campuses of technology companies, in libraries, and in conjunction with other educational programs.

“These schools promote a connection to the community and often have business partnerships to offer a lot of applied learning,” Luchs said. “It used to be either an academic track or a career track, and now the two are mixing.”

e3 Civic High School, San Diego

e3 Civic High School, San Diego

The school occupies two floors within the nine-story San Diego Central Library. The library, with its metal half-dome, airy feel, and steel and glass construction, is central to the academic mission of the school, and students work with librarians on research, use the library’s maker space and homework center, and even intern there.

Year Opened: 2013

Size: 77,000 square feet for the school within the building

Cost: $10 million of an overall $185 million for the full construction project

Special Features:

• The ninth-floor events space features a 360-degree view of the city.

• Iconic steel, lattice half-dome provides changing light and shade for students and patrons.

• Indoor-outdoor public spaces that take advantage of San Diego’s sunny weather.

Roots Elementary School, Denver, Colo.

BRIC ARCHIVE

Built on the site of a neighborhood shopping center destroyed by arson from gang violence, Roots is part of a broader community effort to reclaim the spot. The school shares its campus with a recreation center and a Boys & Girls Club and features three large flexible learning environments dubbed “groves " to represent the interconnectedness of an aspen-tree forest. These large open spaces promote interaction among grade levels and flexible academic approaches.

Year Opened: 2016

Size: 21,000 square feet

Cost: $6 million

Special Features:

• High-performance acoustic tiles and higher ceilings used to reduce noise.

• Steel support beams from the destroyed shopping center were consecrated in a ceremony and incorporated into the design to honor the past.

• Exterior green and white vertical striping, made of fiber cement board, continues the theme of aspen groves as a metaphor for community.

Summit Technology Academy, Missouri Innovation Campus, Lee’s Summit, Mo.

BRIC ARCHIVE

Summit Technology Academy is designed to be all about flexibility. High school students can take dual-credit classes right there, since the building shares its site with a satellite campus of the University of Central Missouri. The open-plan structure has four academic quads; a series of labs for hands-on training in fields including nursing, technology, and biomedicine; and a central “ideation commons” to provide an inviting space for collaboration and innovation among students.

Year Opened: 2017

Size: 135,000 square feet

Cost: $30 million

Special Features:

• Exterior anodized-aluminum panels that are refractors of light and change color with the angle of the sun.

• Classrooms with moveable panels so spaces can be combined or separated, and all furniture is on wheels, for ease of movement.

• Raw and durable materials are used, such as metal lath railings, polished-concrete floors, ash tongue-and-groove wood accents.

Design Tech High School, Redwood Shores, Calif.

BRIC ARCHIVE

Currently being constructed on the campus of tech giant Oracle, Design Tech High School focuses on design thinking. The long, narrow structure being built on the western shore of the San Francisco Bay will use collaboration spaces to emphasize teamwork and cooperation, as well as flexibility and technology use.

Expected to Open: 2018

Size: 64,000 square feet

Cost: $43 million

Special Features:

• Two-story maker space and fabrication lab, with heavy fabrication on the first floor and digital prototyping on the second floor and an internal elevator to move projects between the spaces.

• Will emphasize sustainability and conservation with low-flow fixtures lowering water use by 40 percent, light roof surfaces to reduce “heat island” effect, use of low VOC emitting materials throughout.

• Four interconnected classrooms with moveable partitions and plentiful power- and wireless-access points.

Discovery Elementary School, Arlington, Va.

BRIC ARCHIVE

Built as the largest zero-energy elementary school in the country (using no more energy than it generates) and the first in the Mid-Atlantic region, Discovery Elementary School has gone on to become what’s known as net positive—feeding electricity back into the local grid. Nestled into a hill, the school leverages design and technology and gives administrators a real-time snapshot of how it’s doing on the efficiency front, with an energy dashboard that breaks down power consumption and generation on an hourly basis.

Year Opened: 2015

Size: 97,588 square feet

Cost: $33.5 million

Special Features:

• 1,706 rooftop photovoltaic-solar panels

• 3,000 linear feet of insulating concrete-wall forms

• “Solatube” day-lighting devices—mirrored tubes for capturing low-angle rays in the morning and late afternoon and high-angle rays at midday.

Contributing writer Robin L. Flanigan provided reporting for this article.
A version of this article appeared in the November 29, 2017 edition of Education Week as Showcases for Design, Creativity in School

Events

This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Reading & Literacy Webinar
Your Questions on the Science of Reading, Answered
Dive into the Science of Reading with K-12 leaders. Discover strategies, policy insights, and more in our webinar.
Content provided by Otus
Mathematics Live Online Discussion A Seat at the Table: Breaking the Cycle: How Districts are Turning around Dismal Math Scores
Math myth: Students just aren't good at it? Join us & learn how districts are boosting math scores.
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Student Achievement Webinar
How To Tackle The Biggest Hurdles To Effective Tutoring
Learn how districts overcome the three biggest challenges to implementing high-impact tutoring with fidelity: time, talent, and funding.
Content provided by Saga Education

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide — elementary, middle, high school and more.
View Jobs
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
View Jobs
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
View Jobs
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.
View Jobs

Read Next

School Climate & Safety 'A Universal Prevention Measure' That Boosts Attendance and Improves Behavior
When students feel connected to school, attendance, behavior, and academic performance are better.
9 min read
Principal David Arencibia embraces a student as they make their way to their next class at Colleyville Middle School in Colleyville, Texas on Tuesday, April 18, 2023.
Principal David Arencibia embraces a student as they make their way to their next class at Colleyville Middle School in Colleyville, Texas, on Tuesday, April 18, 2023.
Emil T. Lippe for Education Week
School Climate & Safety Most Teachers Worry a Shooting Could Happen at Their School
Teachers say their schools could do more to prepare them for an active-shooter situation.
4 min read
Image of a school hallway with icons representing lockdowns, SRO, metal detectors.
via Canva
School Climate & Safety Michigan School Shooter's Parents Sentenced to at Least 10 Years in Prison
They are the first parents convicted for failures to prevent a school shooting.
3 min read
Jennifer Crumbley stares at her husband James Crumbley during sentencing at Oakland County Circuit Court on April 9, 2024, in Pontiac, Mich. Jennifer and James Crumbley, the parents of Ethan Crumbley, are asking a judge to keep them out of prison as they face sentencing for their role in an attack that killed four students in 2021.
Jennifer Crumbley stares at her husband James Crumbley during sentencing at Oakland County Circuit Court on April 9, 2024, in Pontiac, Mich. The parents of Ethan Crumbley, who killed four students at his Michigan high school in 2021, asked a judge to keep them out of prison.
Clarence Tabb Jr./Detroit News via AP
School Climate & Safety Civil Rights Groups Seek Federal Funding Ban on AI-Powered Surveillance Tools
In a letter to the U.S. Department of Education, the coalition argued these tools could violate students' civil rights.
4 min read
Illustration of human silhouette and facial recognition.
DigitalVision Vectors / Getty