"Outlawing Portables"
by Robert Gliemmo and Roger Suggs, Triple A Modular
Earlier this year, in his State of the Union Address, President Clinton spoke
of a need to replace old and dilapidated schools. At about the same time,
Alabama Governor Don Siegelman outlawed additional portable classrooms, except
in emergency situations. As a result, many school districts received numerous
inquiries from parents and the media about modular classrooms and overcrowding.
The commercial modular industry shares a commitment to education and supports
dedication to eliminating sub-standard facilities for school children. With the
explosive and quickly-changing population shifts of our communities; with
limited budget resources and the desire to not raise taxes; with the growing
need for specialized classroom space; and the hope to see students attend
schools in their own neighborhoods, school systems are often caught between the
proverbial "rock and a hard place" when trying to justify their utilization of
relocatable classrooms.
To help clarify the portables issue, several important points follow which can
help school systems respond to questions and concerns.
Relocatable classrooms were first introduced in the U.S. in the mid 1940's.
When people refer to relocatable classrooms as "trailers," they are generally
remembering earlier and lower quality modular units. In the past few years,
technical advancements have enabled the classrooms to be built as single rooms
or multi-story buildings with concrete floors, brick exteriors, restroom
facilities, complete plumbing, air conditioning, electric and heating. All of
these facilities are built in accordance with federal, state, and local
building codes.
Relocatable classrooms can be as functional and aesthetic as a school wants
them to be, and can include many options that older classrooms do not have,
such as computer and video cabling, restrooms, and alarm systems. Also,
relocatable class-rooms may contain 600 sq. ft. to more than 11,000 sq. ft. of
class space, all under one complex roof system.
The single greatest advantage in using relocatable classrooms is that they give
school systems a variety of options. With expanding populations, it is
increasingly difficult to project where growth will occur and whether or not an
area's population will increase or decline.
Often times, schools are forced to add another section of a grade during the
week of registration for students in early Fall. It's simply not possible to
always predict growth spurts. When that growth can be projected, it may be
financially prohibitive or logistically impossible to build a new classroom in
time to accommodate the students. If demographics shift or if the need for a
relocatable classroom at one location disappears, the classroom can be easily
moved to a location with a more critical space need.
To ensure student safety, low maintenance, and longevity, the commercial modular
industry stresses safety, code compliance, value engineering, and aesthetics in
the design of relocatable classrooms. Sometimes, with conventional stick-built
construction, a school system may use old specifications to design their
classrooms. They may also accept a low bid, in turn getting a poorly designed
building. While you can also get inexpensive relocatable classrooms, safety,
code compliance, value, and aesthetics are always priorities with modular
buildings. Enhancing and strengthening design specifications and considering
the references of a particular seller of the relocatable classrooms leads to
more functional and safer buildings for school children.
Budgetary restraints are almost always a high consideration for school systems.
As taxpayers become less and less inclined to pay for massive building
programs, educators have to look at other financial options. Depending on the
design specifications, functional, code compliant, relocatable classrooms
generally cost between $15,000 and $25,000. Adding on just one conventionally
built classroom to an already-existing building can easily cost more than
$100,000.
Cost-saving by using relocatable classrooms is not strictly limited to the
building itself. By utilizing modular classrooms, many school systems are able
to accommodate shifts in population, without having to bus students to other
parts of town, making transportation savings significant.
Enacting laws that prohibit local school systems from making their own
decisions on relocatable classrooms, without providing the billions of dollars
it would take to build thousands of new classrooms and schools, amounts to just
another unfunded mandate. As any local school board member will tell you, it is
those unfunded mandates that are crippling school systems, forcing local
taxpayers to abandon their priorities of what schools really should be.
Copyright ©
Modular Building Institute, September 1999.
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