Health & Environment

Architecture Students Create Boarding School Designs

Texas A&M students recently crafted real estate proposals for the project, including design concepts, construction schedules and operating cost estimates.
May 29, 2015

architecture

(Texas A&M College of Architecture)

 

To assist with fundraising for a private, faith-based boarding school proposed to serve socially and economically disadvantaged youth from the Como neighborhood in southwest Fort Worth, Texas A&M students recently crafted real estate proposals for the project, including design concepts, construction schedules and operating cost estimates.

rendering
Rendering of a rooftop basketball court

(Texas A&M College of Architecture)

“These kids need something better,” said Randy Brown, founder and board chairman of Rivertree Academy, formerly known as Building, Uniting and Restoring Neighborhoods, or B.U.R.N., Ministries, a nondenominational Christian outreach organization that funds programs providing opportunities benefiting youth in the high-crime, low-income Como area.

“These children,” Brown said, “are living in an environment that is toxic to their souls.”

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This article originally appeared on the Texas A&M College of Architecture website.

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