Keeping the environment in mind, our uniquely designed system ensures no effluents or discharge of wastewater
Coppell Independent School District had big ideas: a new learning environment with an innovative education system that could support individual learners. That meant a design that did things differently than the past. After a visioning process, they had three goals: reduce limitations and inspire innovation, celebrate fun and authentic learning experiences through sustainable practices, and create collaboration, connection, and active learning. The Richard J. Lee Elementary School is the first big step in achieving this vision.
Something different is happening inside Lee Elementary—challenge-based learning. This type of education focuses individual learning styles. Learners are presented with a challenge, and then they choose what methods they’ll use to overcome it. We designed the school to specifically support the flexibility that challenge-based learning promotes.
Rather than the conventional organization of classrooms by grade, the learners (students) are grouped into learning houses. Each of the five houses has four classrooms, five small rooms for collaborative work, an open area with casual seating, two labs, and a professional home-base where designers (teachers) share office space. A house is made up of learners from kindergarten to fifth grade, and it’s supported by six designers engaged with all their students. The bonus? The learners and designers all know each other: they’re in the same neighborhood.
This community approach focuses on needs rather than age. With this model of flexibility and stability, Lee Elementary creates a comfortable atmosphere for learners as they move through their education, day to day and year to year.
As the first net zero elementary school in Texas, Lee Elementary is dedicated to producing as much energy as it consumes. Daylight harvesting through reflective ceiling tubes and large windows enables natural light to fill 90% of the school, meaning less energy is needed for illumination. With a compact design, less exterior wall, and careful directional siting, we reduced the amount of energy needed to run the school.
The school uses less electricity than an ASHRAE compliant design, and the electricity it does use is offset by solar panels. With rainwater collection (for plumbing and irrigation) and a geothermal heating and cooling system, Lee Elementary is breaking even—and ahead of the curve.
At a Glance
- Offices
- Client
-
- Coppell Independent School District
- Awards
- American School & University Educational Interiors, Gold Citation, 2017
- TASA/TASB Awards, Caudill Class, 2015
We’re better together
-
Become a client
Partner with us today to change how tomorrow looks. You’re exactly what’s needed to help us make it happen in your community.
-
Design your career
Work with passionate people who are experts in their field. Our teams love what they do and are driven by how their work makes an impact on the communities they serve.