The Light at the End of the Tunnel

At long last, life appears to be inching back toward normalcy. The COVID-19 vaccine is widely available. States are lifting mask mandates. Businesses and offices are re-opening. And K–12 schools, colleges and universities are in different stages of returning to in-person learning. It feels like decades ago—a quaint, simpler time—when schools announced in March 2020 that they’d be closing for “a week or two” as the pandemic began to spread across the United States. Few could have imagined the shadow COVID would cast over the rest of the 2019-2020 academic year, let alone the entirety of the current one.

And yet, life went on—a common theme you’ll see across many pieces in this spring’s issue of Spaces4Learning. One thing we’ve discovered is that maintaining high indoor air quality in crowded spaces is invaluable. Another is that the resiliency of people united against a common foe knows no bounds. It might be a little premature to begin smiling wistfully at the lessons we learned along the way. But the COVID-19 pandemic did reveal a wide array of gaps and flaws in the day-to-day operations of many educational institutions. And now that the storm is starting to pass, we can begin brainstorming and implementing concrete fixes to weak spots we otherwise wouldn’t have known existed.

This magazine, by the way, is only one medium where you can read about how K–12 and higher education institutions are bouncing back. Our website, Spaces4Learning.com, is another. Our twice-weekly newsletters bring the latest education space news straight to your email inbox. Our webinars, DemoCasts, and monthly Schools in Focus podcasts take deeper dives into some of the timeliest issues facing the industry. Whether the news comes in print, digitally, visually, audibly, in bite-sized chunks, or via longer and more thoughtful explorations, S4L covers it all.

We want to thank you for letting us keep you up-to-date during one of the craziest, most unpredictable years in recent memory. Hopefully soon, we can talk about how nice it is to live in “precedented times” again.

This article originally appeared in the Spring 2021 issue of Spaces4Learning.

About the Author

Matt Jones is senior editor of Spaces4Learning. He can be reached at [email protected].

Featured

  • Miami University Approves New $242M Multipurpose Arena

    Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, recently announced that its Board of Trustees has approved construction of a new multipurpose arena at Cook Field, according to university news. The $242-million project will serve as a new centralized hub for student life and create space for economic development on campus.

  • Indiana Wesleyan University Schedules Grand Opening for New Welcome Center

    Indiana Wesleyan University recently announced that it will soon open a new Welcome Center on its campus in Marion, Ind., according to a news release. The facility will serve as the home base for prospective students and their families to learn more about the university and student life there. A ribbon-cutting ceremony is scheduled for February 19.

  • Niles West High School Natatorium Renovation

    Natatoriums are highly specialized spaces, and luminaires in this setting face several unique challenges. Perhaps the most significant is corrosion, which is exacerbated by high indoor humidity, condensation, and pool chemicals, often resulting in material degradation in luminaires not certified to perform in corrosive environments.

  • Northeastern University Breaks Ground on New Housing Community

    Northeastern University recently announced the groundbreaking of a new student housing community on its campus in Boston, Mass., according to a news release. The university is partnering with American Campus Communities (ACC) for development of the project, which will have the capacity for 1,200 students and has a scheduled completion date of fall 2028.