Healthcare Archives - School Construction News https://schoolconstructionnews.com Design - Construction - Operations Mon, 22 Mar 2021 14:13:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.7.11 San Diego Area High School Adds Healthcare-Focused Building https://schoolconstructionnews.com/2021/03/22/san-diego-area-high-school-adds-healthcare-focused-building/ Mon, 22 Mar 2021 12:38:15 +0000 http://schoolconstructionnews.com/?p=49344 The Grossmont Union High School District has added a new building whose instruction will be devoted specifically to guiding students interested in the healthcare professions.

The post San Diego Area High School Adds Healthcare-Focused Building appeared first on School Construction News.

]]>
By Eric Althoff

SANTEE, Calif.—The Grossmont Union High School District has added a new building whose instruction will be devoted specifically to guiding students interested in the healthcare professions. A previous building for adult education on the site was deemed structurally unsound, and thus needed to be replaced due to Southern California’s seismically active environment. The new building fits within the footprint of the previous structure.

The Health Occupations Center Building will feature medical training laboratories that will accurately simulate scenarios students could eventually face in real healthcare settings. The facility will offer courses and certifications such as dental assistant, certified nursing assistant, pharmacy tech, vocational nursing, phlebotomy as well as a more intensive course leading to an EMT certification.

With nearly 20,000 square feet of space, the $6.58 million building will offer classrooms and support spaces in addition to the laboratories. The architectural design also features an exterior breezeway.

The Health Occupations Center Building was designed by architect HED and built by general contractor Conan Construction.

Said Barbara Brock, vocational nurse and instructor at HOC: “The new labs will help us to achieve our mission which is to provide affordable quality education for those interested in employment preparation, skill advancement, and/or personal fulfillment in health-related fields.”

 

The post San Diego Area High School Adds Healthcare-Focused Building appeared first on School Construction News.

]]>
Café Renovation Increases Efficiency https://schoolconstructionnews.com/2011/04/06/caf-renovation-increases-efficiency/ PHILADELPHIA — A café at the University of Pennsylvania’s business school recently received LEED Gold certification, a part of the design firm’s overall plan to increase the efficiency of the hall.

Joe's Cafe, the Wharton School’s LEED Gold for Commercial Interiors project, is located in Steinberg Hall – Dietrich Hall, which houses administration, several academic department offices, Wharton faculty offices, conference rooms, and teaching spaces.

The post Café Renovation Increases Efficiency appeared first on School Construction News.

]]>
PHILADELPHIA — A café at the University of Pennsylvania’s business school recently received LEED Gold certification, a part of the design firm’s overall plan to increase the efficiency of the hall.

Joe’s Cafe, the Wharton School’s LEED Gold for Commercial Interiors project, is located in Steinberg Hall – Dietrich Hall, which houses administration, several academic department offices, Wharton faculty offices, conference rooms, and teaching spaces.


Photo credit: D.A. Webster Photography.

The building was originally designed by McKim, Mead and White in 1952.

Philadelphia-based Voith & Mactavish Architects was retained to prepare a concept design for the building, with the initial focus on creating a unified image for the Wharton campus and incorporating the core aesthetics of the campus’s flagship building, Jon M. Huntsman Hall, according to the firm.

“The sustainable initiatives of the school and desire to create space for collegiality was central when designing this café," said Daniela Holt Voith, principal at Voith & Mactavish Architects. "The building is an exemplary illustration of how green design can be contemporary and sophisticated within an established campus vernacular, while a light and open design provides a seamless flow between the interior and exterior spaces.”

The space previously housed a food-service venue, but was reconfigured to include a large workable kitchen and an adjacent open area for the servery and display.

The kitchen, where all of the large equipment is Energy Star certified, also has recycling and composting programs.

The 1,300-square-foot addition features 18-foot-high ceilings, full-height windows and a green roof, along with doors that open to a seating area overlooking Steinhardt Garden and Woodland Walk.

The café’s steel-trellis, limestone-clad columns extend the garden pavilion and provide shade for both the interior space and outdoor rooms for summer dining. The self-contained seating area is used for meetings, study, and social events when the servery is not in operation.

Keeping in mind the original design, an additional 6,500-square-foot space was reworked for a more efficient reprographics center, a vending area and a new office suite with windows facing the west entrance courtyard.

Public restrooms were relocated them from within the cafe to the main corridor for accessibility, and a redesign of the service entry and corridor off the existing loading dock was made separate from the public entrance, which is now ADA accessible.

The school also added a three-story tower adjacent to the south stair that provides upper story offices, a multi-purpose room and conference rooms.

With low-flow sinks and low-power lighting, the facility has reduced its potable water use by almost 50 percent from baseline values, and 42 percent in power reduction from the ASHRAE standard baseline.

During construction, the project recycled 63 percent of its construction waste from landfill dumping. Much of the café’s material content was manufactured using recycled content and locally made, officials from the firm said.

The building materials — adhesives, sealants, paints, coatings, and flooring materials — contain low VOC for healthy indoor air quality, and none of the wood products contained formaldehyde.

“The project also strove to best represent Wharton’s three core values: commitment to innovation, broad expertise and global outreach,” officials said. “An important social space which has improved opportunities for collegiality for the school, the café has already become a destination and a draw to the broader Penn population.”

The post Café Renovation Increases Efficiency appeared first on School Construction News.

]]>
$3 Million Gift to UC Davis for Sustainable Winery https://schoolconstructionnews.com/2011/02/02/3-million-gift-uc-davis-sustainable-winery/ DAVIS, Calif. — UC Davis announced a $3 million commitment made by Jesse Jackson and Barbara R. Banke of Jackson Family Wines to construct the Jess S. Jackson Sustainable Winery building.

The post $3 Million Gift to UC Davis for Sustainable Winery appeared first on School Construction News.

]]>
DAVIS, Calif. — UC Davis announced a $3 million commitment made by Jesse Jackson and Barbara R. Banke of Jackson Family Wines to construct the Jess S. Jackson Sustainable Winery building. The new facility located within the university’s school for wine and food science.
 
The announcement was made by Neal Van Alfen, dean of the UC Davis College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, at the opening ceremony of the new 34,000-square-foot teaching and research complex built within the Robert Mondavi Institute for Wine and Food Science.
 
The building, slated for completion in 2013, will include technology to “maximize the environmental capabilities of the adjacent new winery, brewery and food-processing complex,” according to a statement from the school. 
 
Aimed at becoming the first net-zero winery, the building includes technology to capture and sort out as much carbon dioxide as it produces in the winery’s fermentation, preventing damage to the atmosphere.
 
The sustainable winery building will allow instructors and researchers to demonstrate how a winery can operate on rainwater when it captures, filters and reuses that water multiple times, the statement said. The system will make it possible to reuse 90 percent of captured rainwater.
 
Plans for the facility will lead to the UC Davis winery, brewery and food-processing facility eventually operating independent of the main campus water supply.
 
The building will also include an automated system to clean barrels, tanks and fermenters, and rooftop photovoltaic cells to provide all of the facility’s power at peak load.
 
Further environmentally-conscious features include new food-processing equipment that minimizes energy and water requirements, use of recycled glass in the flooring, interior paneling recycled from a 1928 wooden aqueduct, and use of lumber harvested from sustainably certified forest operations.
 

The post $3 Million Gift to UC Davis for Sustainable Winery appeared first on School Construction News.

]]>