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The Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth. NJAIS Trustee Day 2013. www.redcomllc.com. www.redcomllc.com. Who We Are and What We Do.

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  1. The Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth NJAIS Trustee Day 2013 www.redcomllc.com

  2. www.redcomllc.com Who We Are and What We Do REDCOM Design & Construction LLC is a multifaceted design/build company. Established over 30 years ago as REDCO Engineering & Construction Corp., we are a second generation General Contracting company. Our 30 person staff includes in-house licensed Architects, Engineers, Designers, Project Managers, and Job Superintendents. Single source responsibility, qualified in-house professionals, and experienced project managers have enabled REDCOM to design, receive approvals, and construct many diversified facilities. Over the past 30 years, we have designed and built over $150 million dollars worth of new construction. We have been designing and building private schools specifically for over 25 years and have worked with a number of NJAIS and ASAH schools in NJ including: Chatham Day School, Gill St. Bernards, Midland School, ECLC, Cerebral Palsey School of Union County, Goddard School, Learning Experience, Rainbow Academy, Kids One School, Somerset Hills School, and High Road School. Our clients are continuously impressed by our creative and economical approach to design and construction. • Gregory J. Redington, P.E, P.P, President • Bachelor of Science degree in Civil Engineering from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute with a minor in Architecture • Professional Engineer and Professional Planner in the State of NJ • 25 years of experience in the Design Build industry • President of REDCOM since 1997 • Lives in Westfield, N.J., with his wife and 3 children. Outside of work, Greg enjoys family activities, coaching, playing lacrosse, surfing, sailing, and traveling.

  3. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Outline OUTLINE Objective: Today I will explain the process involved in expanding or renovating your school so that you will be able to move forward and produce a facility change that is in alignment with your school’s mission in the most efficient manner. • To Do This I Will: • Show you a bird’s eye view of the entire process • Share with you my company’s 5 step process that we use with all our clients • Assessing • Forecasting • Budgeting • Planning • Executing (Designing/Building) • Give you suggestions, instructionsand forms so your school can go through most of the process on your own • Provide you with examples throughout

  4. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Mission What is the mission of your school? • I imagine it has something to do with becoming great at: • Educating students • Attracting new students and families • Staying financially healthy How do you determine and acquire your school facility needs now and into the future to achieve these goals with excellence? How do you make sure your school’s campus and all its physical assets are aligned perfectly towards achieving this mission? These goals? These values?

  5. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Mistakes • Mistakes that I see schools (as well as other organizations I work with) make often include: • Not exploring and pursuing the “big dream” • Not being able to make the hard decision to move forward with confidence • Not having the courage to redirect the focus after resources have been spent • Not choosing the proper in-house school team • Not choosing the proper outside consultant team • Not looking into all possibilities for each step of the process (my personal fear of omission) • Hiring one professional to do too much too soon • Not choosing the proper construction team and method • Not maintaining good communication and coordination between everyone • involved • Being surprised by design issues, costs, or delays late in the project that were • not planned for

  6. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Teams TEAMS • Who are team members? • School board • Facility committee • Finance Dept. • Head of School • Teachers • Trustees • Land Use Attorney • Engineer • Architect • Contractors • Interior designer • Furniture designer, etc.

  7. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Teams • The Team Member Test • Ask yourself these questions when deciding to bring on each new team member: • Do they care about this project? • Do they bring any working knowledge about the process or details required of it? • Do they have the time to commit to it? • Will they work well with the others involved? • Are they experts in an area that is important to this project? • Are they looking after their own needs or the needs of the school? • Can you count on them to work with you if things go poorly?

  8. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth 5 Step Process 5 Step Process Assessing: To measure and itemize your school’s existing situation Forecasting: To calculate or estimate something in advance of your school’s changing size Budgeting: Assigning costs to each need, want, and wish Planning: Putting priorities in the proper order Executing: Getting it done in three dimensions (Design/Building) 3 Dimension

  9. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Fear Of Omission Fear of Omission What facility change does your school need in order to be perfectly aligned with its mission? Now think about other more subtle changes that your school needs to make And finally really small change or updates that you school needs. I bet you missed some things…

  10. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Execution Physical elements of an independent school:

  11. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Assessing Step #1 ASSESSING: To measure and itemize your school’s existing situation • Perform a present day “programming analysis” (PA) • A measurement of your existing facilities and current conditions • It can be as broad as • “Language department is fine” • “Science rooms need updating” • It can be as specific as • “10 swivel stools in art room, 4 need repair” • “Sink in lower wing janitor’s closet drips” • “Library is too small” • “Gym locker rooms need a new floor” • Count every room, desk, item, and space • Is anything underutilized? The more specific you get, the better your results!

  12. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Assessing Suggestion for completion: OR Self-perform department by department evaluations for presentation to a board committee using these standardized forms. Have each department submit a list with items listed in 5 categories (Waste, Works, Needs, Wants, Wishes) Follow the directions. Hire a consultant to conduct interviews of your staff, inspect your physical facilities, and write a large report about your existing facilities. Directions: Get a list of all the areas in independent school might need Have a department head staff meeting explaining the process of evaluation the school is going to undertake Personalize & distribute forms to department heads for each of their spaces Have each department conduct a staff meeting to explain the process and distribute the forms to all their staff Have the Department heads review and compile all their forms and summarize all the items into lists of Waste, Works, Needs, Wants, Wishes All department summary forms are to be submitted to the facility committee

  13. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Assessing Questionnaire Form Data Form Bubble Form

  14. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Assessing Term Definitions WASTE: This is part of your facility that is not being used to its fullest potential. An asset that is too large or that goes un-used part of the day are examples of this. WORKS: An area (or thing) that is perfect for its use, and is used to its fullest potential. NEEDS: This is something that you are severely lacking that is a top priority just to continue serving your current needs. WANTS: This is an item that you would like to have to improve your current situation. WISHES: This is the big dream item. Don’t limit your imagination here, if you dream about it write it down.

  15. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Forecasting Step #2 FORECASTING: To calculate or estimate something in advance of your school’s changing size • Forecasting Steps: • Similar to Assessing, only here you need to incorporate a “growth factor” to your requirements • Determining this growth factor is a high level board decision • Do not fall into the trap of letting your current campus • facilities determine your growth factor • Your growth factor should be based only upon what your IDEAL school size is • If your school is currently at its ideal student body and staff level then your growth factor will be 1.0 Go through each form from the Assessing step and adjust it for your determined “growth factor” • CAUTION • “Growth Pinch Points” • When will you need another section for 4th grade instead of another desk? • When do you need another lunch period or larger dining hall vs. more tables? • When do you need another practice field vs. different scheduling?

  16. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Forecasting Suggestion for execution: OR Perform in-house department by department meetings with one of the school’s leaders about how growth can be best managed, and how their department fits in with the rest of the school’s plans. Have each department submit a list with items listed in 5 categories (waste, works, needs, wants, wishes). Follow the directions. Hire a consultant to follow up on the present day programming analysis by conducting planning meetings with school leaders about future plans, growth, and needs. Apply multipliers to the current facilities and write up a report about what they heard. Directions: School board decides upon a growth factor Meetings with Department Heads to talk about inter-department size changes Department Heads adjust PA Forms according to growth factor All department forms get submitted to the facility committee

  17. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Forecasting Now all your background information has been compiled and your future needs have been identified. But your school already knows what it needs next – right? You may feel that the specific improvement your board has been talking about for years is an obvious choice to being your first priority and there is no need in going through the previous few steps of Assessing and Forecasting. In most cases this thinking will result in a less than ideal change to your school. Since you have not asked thorough detailed questions to all of your departments there are other needs at your school that are passing by unnoticed or they are possibly being held up behind the popular “big addition” to your campusthat has been talked about for years. Another thing to consider is even if the process of Assessing and Forecasting does not yield a priority higher than the one that the board has been thinking about for years, it is likely that some other need will present itself that you will be able to incorporate into your “big addition” idea.

  18. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Midland School The Midland School - 2002

  19. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Midland School The Midland School – 2002 – Enlarged Portion

  20. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Midland School The Midland School – 2004 – Gym Schematic Plan

  21. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Midland School The Midland School – 2006 – As Built Plan

  22. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Budgeting Step #3 BUDGETING: Assigning costs to each NEED, WANT, and WISH • All the results of your programming analysis get itemized here with a cost attached • Every “waste” category item gets a credit attached to it because there is a value you may not be taking advantage of: • You have extra space in the lower school wing • You have extra furniture, equipment, etc. • Some spaces are empty some parts of the day • Every “works” category costs $0.00 because it is fine now and for the foreseeable future • The “needs”, “wants”, and “wishes” categories get costs attached to them

  23. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Budgeting “WE CAN’T FIGURE THIS STUFF OUT ALONE!” • How do we know what things will cost? • How can we get prices without specific designs? • How can we nail down costs without knowing when the work will be done? • How can we tell if the quality & details you expect will be included in the budget? Answer: There are plenty of experts and consultants that would be anxious to share their knowledge about costs at little or no fee. If they object, then maybe they don’t meet your criteria for an ideal team member.

  24. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Budgeting

  25. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Budgeting Suggestion for completion: OR Assign the task to an in-house team member. Have them access experts and/or consultants familiar with the costs of each item. Follow the directions Hire a consultant to line item your “programming analysis” results with price estimates attached and present a report to you. Directions: Collect all the PA Forms from the Department Heads Create 5 separate lists: 1) Waste, 2) Works, 3)Needs, 4) Wants, 5) Wishes See if anything from the “Waste” use can be matched up with a Need/Want/Wish Assign costs to all other Need/Want/Wish with the help of experts and consultants

  26. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Budgeting Expert vs. Consultant Words of caution: Expert: An expert is a person or company that performs the work. The expert is afraid of not getting the work for fear of giving you too high a price and losing the job to someone else, but he is also responsible for the price he is quoting you because he is the one that is committing to provide you the service personally for the costs he is quoting. Consultant: A consultant is a person or company that specifies (designs) the work. The consultant has no personal liability in giving you a high or low price, but he is afraid of giving you too low a value for fear that you will go over budget late in the project and blame them. All consultants are also experts in specifying (designing), so as far as acquiring estimate for the cost of their services, they are experts. It is hard for a consultant to be up to date on the trends and month-by-month fluctuations in economic costs, product availability, and timing that affect all facility costs. Even on the most thorough of designs receiving different prices that range over 25% from one another is not uncommon.

  27. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Planning Step #4 PLANNING: To determine in advance the best order of priorities for a number of items • Make a plan. Set a goal. What is a goal? A dream with a deadline. • Up until now all the steps have been fact finding exercises • Planning now becomes the subjective part of the process • All your items have been identified and assigned a costs • Which ones get top priority?

  28. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Planning Suggestion for completion: Hire a consultant to walk the school decision makers through the exercise of evaluating the prioritizing all of the needs/wants/wishes and writing up a report with the results. Set facility committee meetings to prioritize the needs/wants/wishes in order of value to the school. Follow the directions. OR • Directions: • Go through the “needs list” and categorize all of them by cost from least to most • Take the top two selections and compare them to each other • Remembering your school’s mission and each item’s cost, ask the question: • “Which one of these two items is most in alignment with my school’s goals” • Take the winning selection and then compare it to the third item on the list the same way • Continue down the list comparing the winning item to the next item, until you get to the end • Do the same with the 2nd item – one by one down the list – always elevating the winner • Remember to consider the costs of each item as well as its alignment with the schools goals when you are deciding each winner • Do the same with the Wants & Wishes lists – placing the first want below the last Need, and the 1st Wish below the last Want. • “Growth Pinch Point” items may jump the list as needed

  29. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Planning The resulting list will be the school’s needs in order of VALUE to your school’s mission • Caution: • Do not let a small cost item get buried behind a large dream that is years away • You may discover that some smaller items may be able to become incorporated as part of a higher priority larger item

  30. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Planning • Example #1: • Your in-house team has gone through the first 3 steps in this procedure and came up with these items as priorities: • Paint Classrooms & Halls $ 30,000.00 • Tennis courts $ 80,000.00 • Repaving & lighting Parking lot $ 200,000.00 • Dining Hall $ 1,000,000.00 • Gym$ 3,000,000.00 • Your board or CFO told you that there was $200,000.00 available to spend on facility improvements. • Do you save it for the new Gym or Dining Hall in the future? (the big things will never happen unless you save for them…) • Do you spend it all on the parking lot now? (it costs more and more each year to patch it, and it looks bad…) • Do you build the tennis court now and save the rest for the larger projects (the kids would love it, and the parents would be impressed – and it is a multi-use surface) • Should you paint the classrooms & Hall and save the rest? Maybe also do the tennis court? • Maybe repave only half of the parking lot and do the tennis court and classroom painting?

  31. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Planning • Example #2: • You have decided to build or renovate your gym. • Budgeting assessed a $2.5 million price to this a few years ago. • Your board has already completed all the items on the list with a higher priority, and it is the gym’s turn. • You have set a 2 year fundraising deadline. • A consultant(s) is brought in (Lawyer, Architect, Engineer, Contractor, etc.) to work with you on the project. . . • During more detailed discussions with your consultants and communication with other schools that have gone through the process themselves in the past, you learn that you can spend either $2 million or $3 million on a gym that would “do the job”. Your fundraising committee tells you that the $2 million gym can be finished in 2 years, but you would have to wait another year to build the $3 million gym. • Also, the $1 million dollar difference could instead be used for that art/music/dance/classroom/administration wing that is the next priority on the list of achieving your school’s goals. • Which way should you go with the gym? • Would your decision change if all the money could be acquired at the same time? • (There is likely a way to do that with urgency, loans, or other funding resources)

  32. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Planning • Example #3: • What is better for the school? • To have more building area with less expensive details, or a smaller area with more expensive details? • Can you build the larger building area, and after it is open fill in costly details in the coming years as the money comes in, or as namesake donations are received (hold off on the $100,000.00 bleachers to help pay for the meeting room and offices you want right away). • Or do you permanently change a design decision (like building size - or wood or rubber for the gym floor) based upon cost?

  33. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Execution Step #5 EXECUTION: Designing/Building: Getting it done in 3 dimensions • During this step you will select your outside team members. These may include: • Land Use Attorney • Planner • Civil Engineers • Architects • General Contractor • Surveyors • Sub-Contractors • Interior Designers • Lighting Designer • Sound Engineer • MEP Engineers • Structural Engineers • Furniture Suppliers • IT Companies and etc. • Lessons to Remember: • Do not limit your choices to organizations you have previously worked with • Once hired, do not let one of these new team members get too far ahead of the others • Encourage communication between outside team members and manage this communication • Make sure all team members have passed your team member test • Don’t be afraid to replace a team member if this decision is in alignment with the school’s mission It takes courage to say NO to what is commonplace so you can find something that is truly exceptional

  34. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Execution • Tips for qualifying new outside team members: • Having a team member being local and familiar to the community helps. (Land Use Attorneys, Engineers, and Surveyors) • Having a team member knowledgeable with the type of project you are undertaking helps. (Architects, Sub-Contractors, Interior Designers, and Furniture Suppliers) • Having a team member with the experience and professional staff needed to work well with others and bring everyone together to act as one whole. (General Contractors) • Also remember the level of importance each outside team member is to the process as measured by the portion of the total costs that you pay them: • 0-2% - Attorney, Surveyor, Interior Designer • 2-10% - Architect, Furniture Supplier, IT Company • 90% - General Contractor

  35. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Execution • Things you should do before hiring any outside team members: • Get references and speak with them • Visit jobs they have completed and speak with the owners (or heads of school). Remember not to fault or praise the contractor for the design, or the designers for the quality of construction, or the lawyer for either • Visit their offices and meet their key personnel • Go over their proposal and contract in detail • Review all with your school’s attorney • Make sure they pass the team member test we discussed earlier

  36. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Execution • Try to hire the “Big Four” outside team members at the same time: • Land Use Attorney • Engineer • Architect • General Contractor • The involvement of these four professionals early on will ensure no resource is wasted during the execution stage as the project goes through its feasibility tests. It will also ensure a fast-tracked and smooth execution after township approvals are received. • The town planning zoning ordinance has to be researched to ensure that your school’s project is permitted to be built • Engineering analysis of the land’s attributes will contribute heavily to the project’s location on your property and associated costs • The facility size and layout will affect both of the other legal and engineering issues • A realistic value engineered price estimate will help finalize the decision of the school to move ahead with the project Other outside consultants will also be needed, but most of these will be brought on under the umbrella of one of the main four already selected.

  37. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Execution • Often hired professionals have some very specific ideas about how a project should proceed. Try and vet out this information during your selection process: • Lawyers often have a good idea of the probability of success you will have at the town and how long it will take • Engineers will know a lot about a site just from historical information they have and on-line searches they do. They often know how they will go about their designs before they are awarded the contract. • Architects should have done layouts, shared design ideas, and produced some drawings as part of their proposal to you. • General Contractors should already have shared their experience in costs per square foot for the type of facility you are considering, as well as shared value engineering ideas they have used on other projects. Each of them should be able to give you a firm estimate of the price and time duration it will take to do their portion of the project before you commit to bringing them onto your team.

  38. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Execution • Mis-Step Example #1 • Too often I see schools go down the road with an architect or engineer and spend much to much money with them too early in this process. It is common for large sums to be paid for the detailed design of a facility. Then it gets priced out, and the entire thing gets tabled for years or the town rejects it and it needs a re-design. • After which the process usually starts all over again with another team. • How can you avoid this cycle? • You need to challenge the need, priority, scope, and costs for every facility change along every step. • Just because one designer’s cost estimate for one design is $3 million for the item they have been hired to design does not mean that you can’t get the same space for $2 million. Or you might want to spend $4 million on it. Don’t rely on one idea, price, or design. There are lots of others out there to consider before you charge ahead, or shelve something. • Design competitions are a good way to see how committed outside organizations are to your school, it is also a good way of getting differing views on a solution quickly and inexpensively from qualified professionals. • It is often a good idea to get your “favorites” together for a casual discussion about the project to see how they relate to each other, and see if any new ideas come out of it.

  39. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Execution Township Approval After you choose your land use lawyer, civil engineer, and architect you can make application to the town for a site plan approval if your facility growth priority involves new construction. Very few detailed drawings are needed by the architect until after town approval is secured. Only a basic floor plan and elevations are required. However, once town approval is received, then the footprint and general building image is locked in place, so it is important that your General Contractor has given you a firm construction estimate so that you know that the school is financially ready to go ahead with the project. Once town approval is secured it is time to decide the form of construction you should use and what your relationship between your architect and contractor will be.

  40. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Execution • Forms of Construction: • Low Bid General Contractor (GC) • Invitation only Low Bid GC • Negotiated GC • Design/Build (D/B) • Construction Manager (CM) to GC • CM directly to Subcontractors • Owner’s Rep. directly to Subcontractors • Developer (when a lease is involved)

  41. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Execution Low Bid GC & Invitation Only Low Bid GC This is when an architect and engineer prepare full bid documents and specifications that go out to the public market place (or invited bidders only). This is the format our government uses for all public projects. • Pros: • This method allows your school to get apples to apples bids on a single design • The owner should know exactly what the facility’s specs are before prices come in. • Cons: • Pay and wait for full set of design documents as well as allowing for bidding time to get project cost • Forces owner to a single design • Creates an adversarial relationship between designers and winning GC • Public bid documents are expensive and time consuming to produce due to volumes and volumes of information given to protect GC’s from litigation and change orders • Designer’s professional goals are not aligned with the goals of your school

  42. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Execution Negotiated GC This is when a GC is selected to join your team early in the process, before the design drawings are finished. • Pros: • Enables your school to know the costs of all your design decisions while they are being made • Allows your school to have more than one professional opinion (“value engineering”) • Enables your school to change the scope of the project as costs are learned • Ensures time and expense of final design is not wasted • Fast-tracks process by allowing bidding and document development to overlap • Ensures cooperation between designers and GC • Cons: • It is impossible to have a true apples to apples cost comparison • Your school is at the mercy of the GC for pricing any future detail • Some design element decisions that are left in the school’s hands if the designer and GC disagree on some details

  43. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Execution Design/Build (D/B) Design/Build is when the design and the general contractor join up to present the school with a single team in charge of the design and construction of a facility. A D/B team may be a single company or it could be a combination of separate companies. • Cons: • Does not allow for exact apples to apples competitive bidding between competing D/B firms • Eliminates a layer of 3rd party oversight • “Value Engineering” options offered all come from the same organization • Pros: • Offers all Pro’s of Negotiated GC • Presents school with pre-formed team • Enables owner to know exactly what design choices cost – in real time • Avoids time delays when two separate organizations are involved • Minimizes soft costs on design work • Little to no expense wasted on design documents • Cooperative relationship between designer and builder • Almost always results in a shorter project duration with less money wasted • D/B team’s goals are perfectly aligned with your school’s goals

  44. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Execution CM Directly to Subs During this format a construction manager is hired as in the example before, but in this case a GC is not hired. Instead the CM also acts as a GC and hires the subs directly. • Cons: • There is not any firm fixed price involved with this job. You will not know the costs until the end • The CM’s costs will likely be more under this arrangement • Like the other CM arrangement this is more practicable for the larger multi-phased projects. • Pros: • “CM directly to Subs” offers all of the Pros of a CM to GC arrangement • The school saves the expense of a GC

  45. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Execution Owner’s Rep directly to Subs This is the format you are currently using for small projects. Your facility team hires subs directly to work on various things on your campus. In a slightly more formal version, your school would hire an individual directly to work specifically on one project as an employee or “Owner’s Rep” • Cons: • High complexity jobs may reach a choke point with only one individual running the entire thing • All Sub’s checks need to be written individually by the schools finance department which could create a paperwork burden • There is little recourse if things go poorly on the project • There is no guaranteed fixed price • The longer the project lasts, the longer the Owner’s Rep is employed • Pros: • Works well on low expense simple projects with only a few subcontractors • Lower cost than other solutions • Best if this individual also hires the design team • Minimizes time required by other school staff

  46. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Execution Construction Manager (CM) to GC CM to GC is when your school decides to hire a construction manager to manage this entire last step for your school. This can incorporate the selection of the designers as well as the GC. Usually a CM works under a contract with the school that includes a fee that is a set percentage and also a fixed monthly expense that may vary depending on the stage of the project you are in. This arrangement is limited to large multi-phase projects which may involve different designers and GC’s for different portions of the work. • Pros: • Allows school to have independent 3rd party team member to overlook all phases of a project • Minimize required involvement of in-house team members • Cons: • The longer and more costly a project is, the better it is for the CM • The expense of a CM is on top of all the other costs of a project

  47. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Execution Developer (when a lease is involved) This arrangement is only engaged when your school wishes to lease a facility from the developer that is building the facility for you. A lease rate and term would be agreed on based upon a facility’s size and finishes agreed upon. This option may come into play if you have an off-campus facility or if you wish to minimize the school’s capital investment in real estate. This is a very specialized circumstance, please come see me if you are presented with this as an option.

  48. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Execution Financing Options • There are also a variety of financial arrangements that can be used: • Cost Plus • Fixed Fee • Lump Sum • Developer – build to suit to lease

  49. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Execution Insurance Needs • There are different levels of insurances you need to request and decide upon • Owner’s risk (inexpensive when the owner buys it – and worth it) • General Liability (for all 3rd parties involved) • Professional Errors and Omissions insurance for consultants • Construction Bond (costs 1 ½% - 3% of a job’s total and only kicks in if the builder is basically bankrupt) • Operations daily insurance (some is included with owner’s insurance – additional is expensive)

  50. An Independent School’s Guide to Facility Growth Ideas • Ideas to consider: • Bring the culture of the school into the facility growth process. • Tours or studies on things they can see during the construction – math, science, geography (where materials come from), history (how long have they been doing it like this) • Include student design or art in the finished product, or in it’s development. • Student design competition for the project, or art, etc. • LEED facilities • Solar panels as a ethically responsible way of generating a 5-7% • return on your investment.

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