Divide and Conquer

Santa Monica Boulevard Elementary Charter School was using filing cabinets to separate one large multipurpose room into a technology center, storage area, office and one-on-one learning environment for special education students. After a quick search on the Internet, the school found an affordable and timely solution to their problem: Screenflex Portable Room Dividers.

Like so many other schools in Southern California and across the nation, they were extremely cramped for space. “Needless to say, it wasn’t working out,” said Linda Lee Technology coordinator at the school. “The students could see right into the other work areas and it was extremely noisy and distracting for everyone.”

Lee knew she would have to make the most of the space she had to work with. The charter simply couldn’t afford any additional classrooms, and even if it could, waiting was not an option. The campus was expecting 1,500 students in the fall and her special education students would be without a private place where resource specialists could conduct speech therapy.

“Everything I needed was right there on the Screeflex website,” said Linda. “I placed the order and in less than three months, I had the space I needed at a cost our school could afford.”

For approximately $10,000, the large multipurpose room was transformed into three nice-sized rooms and a storage area. The walls are 6-feet tall and include three doors that help to create more private study and work areas, as well as mallard green designer fabric that blends in nicely with in the school’s decor and surroundings.

Screenflex designed the room dividers so that speech therapy could be conducted in one area, teachers could prepare lesson plans in another and items could be stored in the remaining section. All of the dividers are on casters so they can be easily wheeled away and stored in just minutes. This versatility makes dividers an excellent alternative not only to conventional construction, but to modular classrooms as well.

“As your needs change, you can open a room back up and you would never know the dividers were there,” said Steve Bonesz Marketing manager at Screenflex. “That is the beauty of portable room dividers.”

“A school may have tremendous growth one year, but a significant decline the next,” said Bonesz. “Portable room dividers allow your school to change its use of space as its needs change at a much lower cost than using modular classrooms.”

www.screenflex.com

This article originally appeared in the School Planning & Management July 2013 issue of Spaces4Learning.

Featured

  • LSU Breaks Ground on $200M Residential Project

    Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, La., recently broke ground on a new residential complex, according to university news. The South Quad residential project will consist of two buildings and add a total of 1,266 beds for freshmen students. The development comes with a price tag of $200 million, and it’s scheduled to open to students in fall 2027.

  • Houston K–12 District Opens New Elementary School

    The Lamar Consolidated Independent School District (Lamar CISD) recently announced the completion of a new elementary school in a western suburb of Houston, Texas, according to a news release. Haygood Elementary School measures in at 110,000 square feet, has the capacity for 854 students, and is the first of three new schools scheduled to be built in the Cross Creek West community.

  • restroom sinks

    CSU Dominguez Hills Standardizes Plumbing to Improve Restroom Maintenance and Efficiency

    At California State University, Dominguez Hills, facilities leaders have taken steps to standardize restroom fixtures as part of a broader effort to improve maintenance efficiency and control long-term costs.

  • UT System Board of Regents Approves $108M Housing Complex

    The University of Texas System Board of Regents recently announced the approval of a new, $108-million housing complex at the University of Texas at El Paso (UTEP), according to a news release. The facility will stand four stories and have a total of 456 new beds for freshmen students.

Digital Edition