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Brunner, Patrick M. | 1 |
Gisolfi, Peter A. | 1 |
Herman, Jerry J. | 1 |
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Sabo, Sandra R. | 1 |
Shelley, Kevin D. | 1 |
Young, Jenny E. | 1 |
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Herman, Jerry J. – Educational Facility Planner, 1994
Quality control in designing and building school buildings depends on customer feedback. Outlines and graphically demonstrates the interrelationships among the input sources; the information acquired; and the three phases of predesign, construction, and completion. (MLF)
Descriptors: Architects, Architectural Programming, Educational Facilities Planning, Elementary Secondary Education
Brunner, Patrick M.; Shelley, Kevin D. – American School Board Journal, 2001
In school construction projects a great deal of work and planning needs to happen before ground breaking starts. Lists consistent factors that should always be considered when setting up a facility-design timeline. (MLF)
Descriptors: Architectural Programming, Bids, Community Support, Educational Facilities Planning
Sabo, Sandra R. – American School Board Journal, 1994
The school design process depends on open communication and the participation of various constituencies or customers. Today's architects use a variety of strategies to make sure they build the schools communities want. Describes approaches used by three architects. (MLF)
Descriptors: Architects, Architectural Programming, Community Involvement, Educational Facilities Design
Pierce, Judy; And Others – Educational Facility Planner, 1993
Focuses on ways to meet the facility needs of students with disabilities in inclusive classrooms. Provides a definition of inclusion; discusses some processes to design school environments that support a side range of student needs; and presents a process that will enable facility planning teams to move all students from self-contained classrooms…
Descriptors: Architectural Programming, Disabilities, Educational Facilities Design, Educational Facilities Planning
Gisolfi, Peter A. – American School Board Journal, 1999
A firm that has designed many preschool and elementary school projects identifies three factors that are vital to successful design for young children: protection, interaction, and scale. Accompanying drawings of three projects illustrate these design principles. (MLF)
Descriptors: Architects, Architectural Programming, Childhood Needs, Educational Environment
Arnold, David – School Planning and Management, 1997
The Lowell, Massachusetts, district technology administrator and team have assumed responsibility for determining the requirements for technology and establishing the specifications and selection of equipment. Joint discussions with the architect are held to develop appropriate infrastructure and educational spaces. (MLF)
Descriptors: Architects, Architectural Programming, Audits (Verification), Computer Uses in Education
Passantino, Richard J. – School Business Affairs, 1994
Addresses design and safety issues of which school business administrators should be aware when they become involved in integrating a preschool facility with an elementary school. Discusses building environmental factors, safety, health codes, play surfaces, energy conservation, and architectural considerations. (KDP)
Descriptors: Architectural Programming, Architectural Research, Building Design, Day Care
Designing a Health Clinic for Prairie City, Oregon: Revitalizing Main Street in Small, Remote Towns.
Young, Jenny E. – Small Town, 1995
A small town designed a health clinic to entice a health care practitioner to locate in the town, increase the town's economic feasibility, generate local jobs, and stimulate business in the downtown. The design is important to achieving these goals by continuing and enhancing the town's character. (TD)
Descriptors: Architectural Programming, Architecture, Building Conversion, Clinics