A4LE Conference
We had a blast at the 2026 A4LE Wilmington Conference that focused heavily on the future of K–12 educational environments through the interconnected lenses of cost management, sustainability, flexibility, equity, and student well-being. Across sessions, presenters consistently emphasized that educational facilities are no longer simply buildings—they are strategic tools that influence student outcomes, workforce readiness, community identity, operational efficiency, and long-term district resilience. Industry leaders demonstrated how collaboration, early planning, and data-informed decision-making are becoming essential in navigating increasingly complex educational projects.
A major theme throughout the conference was adaptability—whether in building systems, delivery methods, learning environments, or community engagement strategies. Sessions repeatedly highlighted the need for flexible CTE environments, scalable building standards, resilient funding strategies, inclusive design frameworks, and evolving project delivery approaches that can respond to rapid educational, economic, and technological change. Speakers also reinforced the growing importance of sustainability, indoor environmental quality, embodied carbon reduction, and equitable community-centered engagement in shaping future-ready schools. Collectively, the conference presented a vision for educational design that prioritizes people, partnerships, and long-term impact while balancing fiscal realities and operational demands.
Our takeaways that we look forward to put into our practice are:
Sustainability and wellness are becoming foundational expectations.
High-performance HVAC systems, adaptive reuse, indoor air quality, biophilic design, and embodied carbon reduction were consistently presented as essential components of modern educational facilities rather than optional enhancements.A4LE 2025 – Advancing K–12 Facilities
Collaboration drives successful outcomes.
Nearly every session emphasized the importance of early and continuous collaboration between owners, architects, engineers, contractors, educators, operations staff, and community stakeholders.
Flexibility and adaptability are now essential design priorities.
Schools must support changing educational models, evolving workforce needs, technological advancement, and future renovations without requiring complete system replacement.
Data-informed planning improves decision-making.
From energy modeling and construction cost benchmarking to post-occupancy evaluations and inclusive design metrics, successful projects increasingly rely on measurable performance data.
Community engagement is critical to trust and long-term success.
Whether discussing bond planning, inclusive design, adaptive reuse, or school modernization, presenters reinforced that meaningful stakeholder engagement creates stronger alignment and more resilient outcomes.
Sustainability and wellness are becoming foundational expectations.
High-performance HVAC systems, adaptive reuse, indoor air quality, biophilic design, and embodied carbon reduction were consistently presented as essential components of modern educational facilities rather than optional enhancements.
Some of our favorite sessions were:
Redefining School Design Guidelines: Innovation, Savings, and Sustainability Combined
Representatives from Charlotte Mecklenburg Schools, CMTA, and LeChase Construction shared how collaborative redesign of district standards is transforming school sustainability and operational performance. The session detailed CMS’s transition toward water-source heat pump systems and high-performance HVAC strategies that improve indoor air quality, reduce lifecycle costs, and align with workforce realities. Through extensive stakeholder engagement and data-driven analysis, the district developed flexible standards that respond to project-specific conditions while maintaining long-term energy goals. Presenters demonstrated how system modeling, utility incentives, and collaborative workshops led to measurable results, including a recent HVAC package that came in significantly under budget while improving projected energy performance. The session illustrated how districts can modernize outdated standards, embrace innovation, and balance sustainability with practical operational needs.
Inclusive Design and the Alliance for Inclusive Design Practice and Research
This session explored the relaunch of the former Center for Universal Design at North Carolina State University as the Alliance for Inclusive Design Practice and Research. Presenters examined the evolution from accessibility and universal design toward a broader framework of inclusive design that intentionally addresses the diverse needs of communities, including neurodiversity, equity, belonging, and representation. Through case studies and research findings, the team demonstrated how community engagement can translate into measurable design strategies that support agency, inclusion, safety, and civic identity in schools and public spaces. The introduction of the “Best Spaces” certification highlighted efforts to create evidence-based tools for evaluating inclusive environments and linking design decisions to measurable outcomes such as belonging and well-being. The session underscored the importance of community-informed design processes and long-term research to create more equitable and meaningful educational environments.
Interactive Roundtable Discussion: Changing School Construction Costs and Planning
This roundtable brought together leaders from Moseley, NC DPI, Union County Public Schools, Cabarrus County Schools, Guilford County Schools, and New Atlantic Contracting, Inc. to address the escalating challenges facing K–12 school construction across North Carolina. The panelists shared practical insights into how inflation, labor shortages, supply chain disruptions, and market volatility have dramatically increased construction costs since 2020. The panel emphasized that early collaboration among owners, architects, contractors, and state agencies is essential to managing risk, controlling escalation, and improving project outcomes. Speakers highlighted the importance of realistic phasing, robust preconstruction planning, early site due diligence, and disciplined value engineering that preserves quality rather than simply cutting costs. The session reinforced that transparent communication, data-driven planning, and thoughtful partnerships are critical to helping districts navigate funding limitations while still delivering durable, high-performing schools.