FRED'S
ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY
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©2006
Fred Tepfer
1380 Bailey Avenue Eugene, OR 97402 non-commercial use freely granted |
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Council of Educational Facility Planners, International, Guide
for Planning Educational Facilities . (Columbus: CEFP, 1991)
A good general reference on school design and planning. Section C on planning
is particularly strong, with useful rule-of-thumb data. Unlike some other sources,
it contains process diagrams that ordinary human non-academic mortals can understand.
Beware of overly prescriptive or specific advice in some of the later chapters.
Greenman, Jim, Caring Spaces, Learning Places ,
Redleaf Press, 1988.
Jim is the authority on design, construction, and management of early
childhood environments. His book is very applicable to elementary childrens'
learning environments, and, for that matter, to any building intented for human
occupancy. This is a very good book.
Architectural design references:
Alexander, C., et al,The Oregon Experiment and
A Pattern Language , Oxford University Press:
These two volumes (and others in the series by Alexander published by Oxford)
present an alternative approach to design and programming that was radical in
the 1970's. Since then, a part of these concepts has been incorporated into
general theory and practice, and some has been forgotten. I use Alexander's
work extensively in my professional work, and have found it essential to use
his material as inspiration and resource rather than as gift from on-high to
be used without question. In my experience, for example, the best patterns are
invariably those written by the user group.
Allen, Edward, How Buildings Work, Oxford, 1980:
Ed Allen's book is probably the best all-around guide to the design of buildings.
It conveys complex ideas in clear, non-technical language. Ample illustrations.
Brand, Stewart, How Buildings Learn , Penguin,
1994, 243 pp: This fascinating book has a lot to say to the architectural profession
from an outsiders view, and much of it is very relevant to anyone who uses or
designs buildings. It's fairly inexpensive and a good read. Don't miss Brand's
concept of shearing layers which is critical to understanding why some buildings
thrive and grow and others are disfunctional from the beginning. Highly recommended,
and should be required reading for anyone building or renovating buildings.
Mace, R., Hardie, G., and Place, J., Accessible Environments:
Toward Universal Design : Required reading for everyone on designing
for diverse populations, and consideration of all people's needs as a design
challenge rather as than a code requirement. Should be nailed to the door of
all architect's offices.
Marcus, Clare C., Housing as if People Mattered ,
(Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1986).
This is a classic in the housing field, with clear parallels for educational
environments. It's also a model of clear thinking and good research, without
some of the pseudo-scientific fol-da-rol that is becoming common in the architectural
programming literature.
Pena, W; Problem Seeking ; AIA Press, 1987
This is one of the grandmommies of architectural programming (description of
need), many times updated and reissued. Although its rigidity of process (one
fits all), its somewhat dated attitudes, and its insistence on separation of
programmers and designers are frustrating, its space planning formulas and cost/budget
planning chapters are still the best (heavily excerpted in your packet). Worth
owning and still in print.
Preiser, W., and Ostroff, E. (eds.), The Universal Design Handbook,
McGraw-Hill, 2001
This is the "phone book" of accessibility and universal design, with
many chapters on many subjects, including one by Yours Truly on Educational
Facilities. There is a wealth of useful information, although the amount is
somewhat daunting.
Places , vol. 7, no. 4, :
A whole issue of this wonderful periodical that is almost entirely devoted to
the University of Oregon's Science Facilities project. Required reading for
anyone working on a laboratory project or any other that involves large groups
of people (such as schools). Of special note:
Coffin, Christie J., "Making Places for Scientists", Places
(Vol. 7 No. 4) pp. 38-49.
Yudell, Buzz, "Building Community Through Participation", Places
(Vol. 7 No. 4) pp. 22-29.
Zeisel, John, Inquiry by Design , Cambridge, 1981,
250 pp:
This is a book about design theory, and is a classic in the field. It provides
by far the best resource on many of the techniques used by architects to determine
user needs, and also a theory of programming within the design process that
relatively accurately reflects the methods of experienced designers and programmers.
Building maintenance references:
Edwin B. Feldman, Building Design for Maintainability .
(Atlanta: Service Engineering Associates, Inc., 1982). Although at times opinionated
(or maybe I just don't agree with his opinions), Feldman's book is the best
that I've seen for ensuring that construction pay attention to long-term cost
issues, especially issues related to custodial maintenance. It's not easy reading,
but you can skip to the checklist for the best stuff.
Poston, W., and Muther, Connie, Making Schools Work
, Newbury Park, CA: Corwin Press, 1992. This small book covers the huge area
of management of support operations, from the office through the kitchen out
onto the athletic fields and into the buses. By definition it is terse and to
the point, so it is very useful, but in some cases quite incomplete. This book
is in most cases a great place to start, and may give you enough on its own.
For example, the two pages on hiring architects are an effective summary of
everything that I know about the subject.
Lufkin, Peter S., and Pepitone, Anthony, The Whitestone Building
Maintenance and Repair Cost Reference , Santa Barbara, CA: Whitestone
Research (published annually). Published annually, this is an expensive but
useful resource in estimating or benchmarking maintenance and repair costs in
buildings. Its huge amount of information is not for the timid, and its high
cost means that most districts would probably want to borrow rather than buy
this, but if you are building a maintenance budget or trying to predict maintenance
costs for a new facility, this is a great place to start.
Keniry, Julian,Ecodemia: Campus Environmental Stewardship
, The Wilderness Society, 1995. This has good information on micro-chemistry
and other approaches to hazardous materials and teaching lab environments. It
has many other useful tips for environmentally-responsible practices in an education
setting.
Kaiser, Harvey, The Facility Manager's Reference
, Kingston, MA: R. S. Means. Althugh oriented toward larger organizations,
this hefty tome does have quite a bit of useful data. However, it is more oriented
toward corporate facilities managers than toward educational environments. Worth
consulting but, at least for most school districts, not worth owning.
Laboratory References:
Ruys, Theodorus, ed., Handbook of Facilities Planning, Volume
I, Laboratory Facilities , Van Nostrand & Reinhold, New
Yord, 1990. This is a large, detailed guide to the design of research laboratories.
However, since there is not an equivalent volume for teaching laboratories,
it is an essential aid for the planning and design of schools with laboratories.
Probably not worth owning, but definitely worth borrowing.
Oregon AdministrativeRules, Chapter 437, 1910.150 Occupational Exporsure
to Hazardous Chemicals In Laboratories.
Acoustics References:
Charles M. Salter Associates, Acoustics, William Stout Publishers,
San Francisco 1999 - Technical, but accessible. It's the best by the master
teacher and practitioner in this area.
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