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Amsterdam

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Introduction
Q & A Jilk
Attendees

Speakers & Case Studies:
• Hertzberger
• Copa
• Tapaninen
• Duke
• Dull
• Nathan
• Bodete
• Westbroek
• Meijer

Workshops:
• Location
• Space
• Time
• Scale
• Cost
• Context

Sponsored by The National Clearinghouse for Educational Facilities
edfacilities.org  

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Alpha Floor Plan

Alpha Site Plan

Designing for the Unknown
Case Study presented by Norman Dull, AIA

Anticipating future needs is a daunting task, said Norman Dull, and the key is to be flexible. He offered examples of two facilities that did just that: Alpha High School in Gresham, Ore.; and Southridge High School in Beaverton, Ore.

Alpha High School
Alpha is an alternative school that offers individually tailored training, diverse experience in the work world, and positive self-development and aims to help students determine future careers as they earn their diplomas.

Students spend half of each day in classroom settings. They spend the other half of the day in job experience settings, be it onsite, in a business lab, or in a school-to-work program.

The school itself is in an urban setting, a block away from the train station. The 16,000-square-foot facility was designed specifically to house these programs. One of Alpha’s key design mandates was that it not look like a school.

Administrators were also adamant that the facility be flexible. Teachers use mobile carts as desks rather than being confined to a single room, but most useful of all are the movable walls and furniture that allow the staff and students to adjust the rooms to their needs.

So far, Alpha High School has a very impressive record: 100 percent of the students have graduated, 97 percent are employed, there is a 95 percent attendance rate, and a 78 percent retention rate.

Click to view plans: Alpha Floor Plan | Alpha Site Plan

Southridge High School
The school’s site was purchased 20 years ago, and the area around it grew tremendously in the meantime. When designers tackled this project they were given the task of creating a lifelong learning and wellness center with a public library, 600-seat auditorium, dance floor, community room, and community police office.

The building has student “streets” instead of halls, with porches serving as entries to each neighborhood. Each neighborhood—a zone with a student area, a parent area, and a production area—serves 450 to 500 students. There are common offices for teachers, with private counseling areas in the back.

The common themes, said Dull, are community, lifelong learning, safety, integration, smallness, collaboration, and flexibility.