Current through Reg. 49, No. 38; September 20, 2024
(a) Definitions.
The following words and terms, when used in this section, shall have the
following meanings.
(1) Adjusted maximum
instructional capacity--The maximum number of students who can be served at an
instructional facility at any point in time as adjusted from the maximum
instructional capacity based on the implementation of innovative instructional
or operational practices.
(2)
Architect--A person registered as an architect under Texas Occupations Code
(TOC), Chapter 1051, and responsible for compliance with the architectural
design requirements of TOC, Chapter 1051.
(3) Authority having jurisdiction--A state,
local, or other regional department or an individual such as a fire marshal,
building official, electrical inspector, or other individuals having statutory
authority or authority assigned contractually by the school district to enforce
specified building codes in accordance with subsection (j) of this
section.
(4) Capital improvement
project--Any school facility project consisting of new construction, major
renovation, or minor renovation for which construction services are procured
under Texas Government Code (TGC), Chapter 2269, in accordance with Texas
Education Code (TEC), §44.031(a)(5).
(5) Contractor--A sole proprietorship,
partnership, corporation, or other legal entity that:
(A) provides construction services and
assumes the risk for constructing, rehabilitating, altering, or repairing all
or part of a school facility at the contracted price;
(B) serves as the general contractor as
defined in TGC, Chapter 2269;
(C)
serves as a construction manager-at-risk as defined in TGC, Chapter 2269,
Subchapter F;
(D) serves as a
construction manager agent as defined in TGC, Chapter 2269, Subchapter E;
or
(E) serves as a prime
subcontractor for a project where the school district has contracted with a
construction manager agent.
(6) Design guidelines or standards--A written
document comprised of standardized information developed by the school
district, possibly in partnership with consultants, often adopted by a school
district board of trustees and provided to the design professional of record
for reference on capital improvement projects. It includes, but is not limited
to:
(A) the instructional programs, grade
configuration, and types of facilities in the school district;
(B) a schedule of the estimated number and
approximate size of all instructional and support spaces included in each
facility and extracurricular activities;
(C) provisions for outdoor
instruction;
(D) adjacencies
diagram(s) defining relationships between functions at the facilities;
and
(E) technical standards related
to functional requirements, systems, manufacturers, products, and
finishes.
(7) Design
professional--An architect or engineer as defined in this subsection.
(8) Designated representative--A person
designated by a school district board of trustees to act as the official
representative of the district, in accordance with TEC, §
44.0312, and TGC,
§2269.053, who has the express authority to act and bind the school
district, to the extent and for the purposes described in the contract for
school facility design and construction services, including responsibilities
for general administration of the contract and required school district
certifications for educational adequacy, space, and construction
quality.
(9) Engineer--A person
registered as an engineer under TOC, Chapter 1001, and responsible for
compliance with engineering design requirements and other applicable
requirements of TOC, Chapter 1001.
(10) Hazardous chemical--This term has the
meaning assigned in Texas Health and Safety Code, §
502.003(13).
(11) Inclusive design--Design that considers
the broad spectrum of human diversity with respect to ability, age, culture,
gender, language, and other forms of human difference.
(12) Instructional facility--This term has
the meaning assigned in TEC, §
46.001, and includes
any real property, an improvement to real property, or a necessary fixture of
an improvement to real property that is used predominantly for teaching
curriculum under TEC, §
28.002.
(13) Instructional space--All interior
general learning spaces, including general classrooms, collaboration spaces,
specialized classrooms, and laboratories. Outdoor instructional space may be
provided at an instructional facility but may not be used to meet minimum
aggregate space requirements in either method of compliance in subsections (h)
and (i) of this section. Certain major support spaces may be classified as
instructional space for purposes of complying with subsection (i) of this
section.
(14) Major renovation--A
project for the construction, addition, rehabilitation, alteration, or repair
of an existing school facility that exceeds $50,000 and requires the school
district to hire an architect and an engineer.
(15) Maximum instructional capacity--The
maximum number of students who can be served by an instructional facility at
any point in time.
(16) Maximum
student enrollment--The maximum number of students a school district expects to
enroll at an instructional facility. For the quantitative method of compliance,
maximum student enrollment must equal the maximum instructional capacity. For
the qualitative method of compliance, maximum student enrollment is allowed to
be higher than the maximum instructional capacity.
(17) Minor renovation--A project for the
construction, addition, rehabilitation, alteration, or repair of an existing
school facility that exceeds $50,000 and for which a school district is
required to hire an engineer but not an architect. If the scope of work for the
minor renovation project expands in the type and way that requires the hiring
of an architect, the project must be reclassified as a major renovation. If the
scope of work for the minor renovation requires that additional safety and
security standards under subsection (k)(2) of this section be included in the
scope of work of the project and those additional safety and security standards
require the hiring of an architect, the project does not require
reclassification as a major renovation.
(18) Modular, portable building--An
industrialized building as defined by TOC, §1202.002 and §1202.003;
any relocatable educational facility as defined by TOC, §1202.004,
regardless of the location of construction of the facility; or any other
manufactured or site-built building that is capable of being relocated and is
used as a school facility.
(19) New
construction--A project for the design and construction of a new school
facility to be used for administrative, assembly, educational, or other
occupancy for which a school district board of trustees is required to hire an
architect, or the installation of a modular building regardless of whether an
architect is required.
(20)
Non-designated entry--A door that is not operable from the exterior and is
designed to only allow for emergency egress.
(21) Non-instructional assembly facility--A
non-instructional facility where large populations of occupants congregate such
as arenas, performing arts centers, and stadiums.
(22) Non-instructional
facility--Administrative buildings, transportation centers, and other support
facilities that are not used predominately for teaching curriculum.
(23) Open-enrollment charter school--This
term has the meaning assigned in §
100.1001(3)
of this title (relating to Definitions).
(24) Primary entrance--
(A) the main entrance to an instructional
facility that is closest to or directly connected to the reception
area;
(B) any exterior door the
school district intends to allow visitors to use to enter the facility during
school hours either through policy or practice; or
(C) any exterior door the school district
intends to allow to remain unlocked during school hours.
(25) Prime design professional--The
registered design professional engaged by a school district or school
district's authorized agent to coordinate certain aspects of the project
requiring review by the building official or third-party code compliance
officer for compatibility of the design of the building or structure with
applicable building codes, including the coordination of submittal documents
prepared by others, deferred submittal documents, and phased submittal
documents.
(26) Project
construction budget--The total aggregate dollars to be spent to execute the
design and construction of a capital improvement project, as approved by the
school district at the completion of design development to establish the
compliance thresholds under subsection (k) of this section in accordance with
the requirements of subsection (k)(2) of this section.
(27) School district--The board of trustees
of an independent school district or its designated representative, as
permitted.
(28) School
facility--Any instructional facility, specialized instructional facility,
non-instructional assembly facility, non-instructional facility, or any other
facility owned or operated by a school district.
(29) School level--
(A) elementary school level--an instructional
facility or specialized instructional facility that includes some or all grades
from prekindergarten through Grade 5 or Grade 6;
(B) middle school level--an instructional
facility or specialized instructional facility that includes some or all grades
from Grade 6 through Grade 8 or Grade 9, or only includes Grade 6;
(C) high school level--an instructional
facility or specialized instructional facility that includes some or all grades
from Grade 9 or Grade 10 through Grade 12, or only includes Grade 9;
and
(D) secondary level--an
instructional facility or specialized instructional facility that includes some
or all grades from Grade 6 through Grade 12.
(30) Secondary entrance--Any exterior door
that is not one of the following:
(A) a
primary entrance; or
(B) a door
that is not operable from the exterior and is designed to allow only for
emergency egress.
(31)
Specialized instructional facility--An instructional facility with a
specialized educational purpose such as agricultural barns.
(32) Square feet per room--The net square
footage of a space, including exposed storage space such as cabinets or
shelving, but not including hallway space, classroom door alcoves, or storage
space such as closets or preparation offices. The net square footage of a room
shall be measured from the inside surfaces of the room's walls.
(33) Square feet per student--The net square
footage of a room divided by the maximum number of students to be housed in
that room during any period of time during school hours.
(34) Third-party code compliance officer--A
person who a school district has contracted with and designated to have all of
the duties and powers of a building official, as defined by required
construction codes, to the extent allowable by state law, to enforce compliance
of any required construction code provision that is not enforced by a state or
local authority having jurisdiction.
(c) Implementation.
(1) The school facilities standards
established in this section shall apply to a capital improvement project for
which at least one of the following has occurred on or after November 1, 2021:
(A) a board of trustees adopts a fiscal year
maintenance and operations budget where a capital improvement project title and
a design or design and construction budget are delineated;
(B) a board of trustees calls a bond election
where one or more capital improvement project titles and design or design and
construction budgets are delineated; or
(C) a new contract or amendment to an
existing contract for architectural services for new construction or a major
renovation project or a contract for engineering services for a major
renovation or minor renovation has been agreed to and signed and dated by both
parties to the agreement.
(2) A school district board of trustees may
elect to treat a capital improvement project, for which an action listed in
paragraph (1) of this subsection was taken prior to November 1, 2021, under
standards established in §
61.1036
of this title (relating to School Facilities Standards for Construction before
November 1, 2021) or under the standards established in this section. If an
election to comply with this section is made by a board of trustees, the school
district and architect may mutually agree that the contract for design services
may be adjusted and then must signify in writing that the project will become
subject to the facilities standards established in this section through an
affirmative indication on the required certification form for the project or
through some other written document or addendum to the contract signifying
election under this section and any modifications to the contract terms agreed
to by the parties.
(3) If a school
district board of trustees makes an election to comply with §
61.1036
of this title under paragraph (2) of this subsection, it may still elect to
comply with subsection (k) of this section.
(4) A school district shall consider
implementing the safety and security standards under subsection (k) of this
section for any safety and security upgrades to an existing instructional
facility that does not require compliance with this section.
(e)
Administration.
(1) Administration of
construction quality standards.
(A) This
subsection establishes standards for the administration and procurements of
design professional services and other professional services and for the
administration of competitive bids and contracting requirements for
construction services. A school district shall comply with requirements in this
subsection and with all applicable requirements, restrictions, and
responsibilities established in state law, administrative code, or by a local
authority having jurisdiction.
(B)
A school district shall comply with the administrative and procedural
requirements established in this subsection and with the standards established
in subsection (j) of this section to promote construction quality and best
value for a capital improvement project subject to this section.
(C) A standard in this section that
incorporates by reference a key statutory provision or administrative rule is
established as a compliance requirement for a school district seeking to
procure, obtain a competitive bid, or administer a contract for construction
services, construction-related services, design professional services, or any
other professional service required for a capital improvement project. The
requirements establish a method by which a school district shall demonstrate
compliance with the requirements in this subsection and with the construction
quality standards and construction code requirements in subsection (j) of this
section. Any express reference to, or omission of, an applicable statutory
provision in this subsection may not be construed to diminish, alter, or abate
a provision of law applicable to a school district or to a school district
capital improvement project subject to this section.
(2) School district requirements and
responsibilities.
(A) In accordance with TEC,
§
46.003(g),
the board of trustees and voters of a school district shall determine district
needs concerning construction, acquisition, renovation, or improvement to
instructional facilities. School district funding is entrusted to the district
by the taxpayers, and a district must ensure procurement processes and
procedures are transparent and provide the best value to the district by
complying with applicable laws governing procurement of professional design
services and construction services and with the standards established in this
subsection to promote construction quality.
(B) In accordance with TEC, §
11.201, a
superintendent shall oversee and ensure compliance with the standards for
school facilities established in this section pursuant to TEC, §
46.008, and shall
ensure board consideration for any action specified as being required to be
made by the board of trustees, whether by statute, board rule, or other
applicable requirement.
(C) In
accordance with TEC, §
44.0312(b),
a board of trustees may not delegate the authority to act regarding an action
authorized or required by TEC, Chapter 44, Subchapter B, to be taken by a board
of trustees of a school district.
(D) In accordance with TEC, §
44.0312(a),
a board of trustees of a school district may, as appropriate, delegate its
purchasing and contracting authority under TEC, Chapter 44, Subchapter B,
regarding an action authorized or required to be taken by a school district or
a designated person, representative, or committee.
(E) In accordance with TEC, §
44.0312(a),
when procuring construction services for a capital improvement project, a
school district board of trustees shall provide notice of the delegation and
the limits of the delegation in the request for bids, proposals, or
qualifications or in an addendum to the request. If the school district fails
to provide that notice, a ranking, selection, or evaluation of bids, proposals,
or qualifications for construction services other than by the board of trustees
in an open public meeting is advisory only.
(F) A superintendent shall ensure that a
requirement to specify the level of delegation of authority is included in the
bid specifications when procuring construction services to select a contractor,
in accordance with TEC, §
44.0312.
(G) In accordance with TEC, §
44.0312(c),
in the event of a catastrophe, an emergency, or a natural disaster affecting a
school district, the board of trustees of the district has all authority to
delegate to the superintendent or designated representative the authority to
contract for the replacement, construction, or repair of school equipment or
facilities under TEC, Chapter 44, Subchapter B, if emergency replacement,
construction, or repair is necessary for the health and safety of district
students and staff.
(H) In
accordance with TEC, §
44.031(d),
and TGC, §2269.051, a school district may adopt rules as necessary to
implement the management responsibilities and duties established for school
district procurement and delivery of professional design and construction
services for a capital improvement project.
(3) Requirements for construction services.
(A) In accordance with TEC, §
44.031, the
award of a school district contract for construction services or
construction-related services valued at $50,000 or more must be made by
competitive bid or by the construction delivery contracting method established
in TGC, Chapter 2269, that provides the best value for the district.
(B) In accordance with TGC,
§2269.056(a), a school district that is considering a construction
contract using a method of procuring construction services other than by
competitive bid must first, before advertising, determine which contracting
method for construction services contained in TGC, Chapter 2269, provides the
best value to the school district for the project.
(C) A school district is required to consider
certain factors established in TGC, §2269.056(b), if the district engages
in consideration of a construction delivery contracting method other than
competitive bidding to evaluate best value for the district, and the district
must adhere to the requirements specified for each type of construction
delivery contracting method established in TGC, Chapter 2269, Subchapters D, E,
F, and G, and must determine, prior to utilization, the best value for the
district. A school district shall comply and adhere in full to the requirements
specified for each construction delivery contracting method.
(D) A school district shall ensure a contract
for construction services required to be procured by a method in TGC, Chapter
2269, specifies the contractor's responsibilities for site safety and requires
compliance with the requirement to provide workers' compensation insurance in
accordance with Texas Labor Code, §
406.096.
(E) In accordance with TGC, §2252.063
and §2252.064, a school district shall ensure that a contract with a
general contractor requires the contractor to provide to the district annual
payment statements derived from sales tax reports and to execute a bond issued
by a surety company authorized to do business in the state of Texas in an
amount determined by the school district, which may not exceed the contract
price. The bond must be payable to the school district and conditioned on the
faithful performance of the terms of the contract.
(F) If a school district selects the design
build method of construction delivery, the district shall procure a design
professional, independent of the contractor, to act as the school district's
representative for the procurement process and for the duration of the
construction in accordance with TGC, §2269.355.
(G) In accordance with TGC,
§2269.408(a), if a job order contract or an order issued under the
contract requires architectural or engineering services that constitute the
practice of architecture or engineering, the school district shall select or
designate an architect or engineer, in accordance with TGC, Chapter 2254, to
prepare the construction documents for the project. In accordance with TGC,
§2269.408(b), TGC, §2269.408(a), does not apply to a job order
contract or an order issued under the contract for industrialized buildings or
relocatable educational facilities subject to and approved under TOC, Chapter
1202, if the contractor employs the services of an architect or engineer who
approves the documents for the project.
(4) Requirements for design professional
services.
(A) In accordance with TGC,
§2269.102, a school district seeking to issue a request for competitive
bids for construction services shall first select or designate an architect or
engineer, in accordance with TOC, Chapter 1051 or Chapter 1001, as applicable,
to prepare the construction documents required for a capital improvement
project to be awarded by competitive bid.
(B) A capital improvement project that
contains architectural or engineering services, as defined by TOC, Chapter 1051
or Chapter 1001, as applicable, must use the professional services of an
architect or engineer, or both, as required by the scope of the
project.
(C) When architectural or
engineering services are required, a school district shall procure
architectural or engineering services from a design professional in accordance
with TGC, §2254.004. A design professional may subcontract another design
professional to perform architectural or engineering services as part of the
scope of services that the subcontracting design professional is providing to a
school district. A school district shall require that an architect perform
architectural services in accordance with TOC, Chapter 1051, to prepare
construction documents required for a new construction or major renovation
project for a school facility. A school district shall require that an engineer
perform engineering services in accordance with TOC, Chapter 1001, to prepare
engineering plans and specifications documents required for a minor renovation,
major renovation, or a new construction project for a school
facility.
(D) A school district
shall designate one design professional to be the prime design professional for
a capital improvement project and shall contractually engage the prime design
professional to review and coordinate the design of the project, allowing the
prime design professional to rely on and contract for other design
professionals where appropriate.
(E) A school district shall ensure a contract
for professional design services for a capital improvement project contains the
scope of services defined with reasonable specificity, including contractual
time parameters, milestones, or deadlines and shall ensure that contract terms
conform to the standard of care established in Local Government Code, §
271.904,
which requires architectural and engineering services to be provided with the
professional skill and care ordinarily provided by competent architects or
engineers practicing under same or similar circumstances and professional
license.
(F) In accordance with
TOC, §1051.703(d), designation as the "prime design professional" does not
expand, limit, or otherwise alter the scope of a design professional's practice
nor does it allow a design professional to fulfill the requirements of a
professional license for which they have not been lawfully granted.
(5) Requirements for professional
services of third-party consultants.
(A) When
procuring the professional services of a third-party consultant for a capital
improvement project, a school district must adhere to the requirements
established in TGC, Chapter 2269.058, and this section. A school district is
required to select a qualified provider of a professional service for which it
contracts under this subsection in accordance with TGC, Chapter 2254.
(B) A school district shall require any
design professional contractually engaged to procure professional design
services from any other design professional as a subconsultant to select and
subcontract the professional design services based on the qualification-based
selection process established in TGC, Chapter 2254.
(C) A school district shall ensure, through
confirmation from a local or state building official or a third-party code
compliance officer as provided for in subsection (j)(2) of this section, that
all required inspections, testing, or permits required for a capital
improvement project have been performed in accordance with contractual terms
and in accordance with all applicable building code specifications.
(D) In accordance with TGC, §2269.058, a
school district shall, independently of the contractor, construction
manager-at-risk, or design-build firm, provide or contract for the construction
materials engineering, testing, and inspection services and the verification
testing services necessary for acceptance of the facility by the
district.
(E) A school district
shall ensure, through confirmation from a local or state building official or a
third-party code compliance officer, that all code compliance issues and
requirements for a capital improvement project have been addressed or
performed, including inspections, testing, and permits that are
required.
(F) Any contract with a
third-party code compliance officer shall be in accordance with terms and
requirements specified by the International Code Council and shall be procured
in accordance with TGC, Chapter 2254, as required by TGC,
§2269.058.
(G) A building
permit or local government fee for code compliance, a contract with a
third-party code compliance officer, a third-party inspector, or consultant
shall be the obligation and responsibility of the school district, procured in
accordance with TGC, Chapter 2254, as required by TGC, §2269.058, and
consistent with the terms of subsection (j) of this section.
(H) In accordance with TEC, §
44.901
and §
44.902,
a school district may contract for energy or water conservation measures and
must procure the services for energy or water savings performance contracts
according to the procedures established for professional services in TGC,
§2254.004.
(6)
Contract compliance and construction quality control assurances. A school
district shall ensure that services sought by or provided to the district for a
school facility capital improvement project, including, but not limited to,
professional design services, construction services, construction
administration services, third-party inspection services, third-party testing
services, or third-party code compliance services, are provided through a
project-specific written agreement that:
(A)
conforms to applicable state laws and any requirements, standards, or codes
adopted by a local authority having jurisdiction;
(B) contains all services required to be
provided in the agreement, prohibits the school district from waiving any
services or directing any changes where recommended by an applicable design
professional, and requires all changes to the construction documents to be
documented in writing and signed by the prime design professional, the
contractor, and the school district;
(C) specifies the level of observation,
testing, and documentation required to be conducted through the agreement to
determine and certify conformance and completion of services
provided;
(D) requires the use of a
prime design professional to coordinate and prepare a proposed statement of any
special inspections or testing required in accordance with the required
construction codes, customizing the proposed statement based on knowledge about
the project regardless of whether the statement requires testing and inspection
to be less than the default requirements of the required construction codes,
including materials testing, project-specific requirements for special
inspections and testing, specific wind and seismic requirements, frequency of
the special inspections, or tests to be performed in accordance with the
referenced standard defining the inspection;
(E) ensures that construction documents are
of sufficient clarity to indicate the timing, location, nature, and extent of
specific inspections and tests required to be performed by the school district
through the local authority having jurisdiction, the third-party code
compliance officer, any third-party special inspector or inspection agency, or
the prime design professional if qualified as a special inspector and specified
as a contractual term;
(F) ensures
that a building permit is issued by a local authority having jurisdiction or a
third-party code compliance officer in which a building permit shall be
considered by the school district to indicate that the proposed statement of
special inspections is approved and constitutes the code-required inspections
and tests;
(G) requires the
contractor, before beginning construction, to submit to the school district,
prime design professional, and the building official or third-party code
compliance officer an acknowledgement of the contractor's responsibility to
notify quality assurance personnel that will be performing inspections and
tests when the project is ready for those specific inspections and tests and
the contractor's responsibility to request and obtain a final report from each
quality control person performing the code-required inspections and tests
before requesting a certificate of occupancy;
(H) requires third-party inspectors to
perform the code-required inspections and tests, to submit inspection and
testing reports to the school district and the prime design professional, and
to submit a final report to the school district, prime design professional,
building official or third-party code compliance officer, and contractor, upon
request by the contractor, indicating any known deficiencies discovered during
the project that have not yet been addressed at the time of the
request;
(I) requires special
inspection and testing reports to be submitted to the building official and the
prime design professional and any discrepancies to be brought to the attention
of the contractor, and if not corrected, to be brought to the attention of the
building official, the prime design professional, and the school
district;
(J) specifies treatment
for timely performance and documentation required in response to requests for
information, change documents, or change orders;
(K) specifies payment certification
provisions requiring notarized contractor signature on the application for
Certificate of Substantial Completion and specifies that the school district
must provide certification of payment for any of the school district's separate
consultants or contractors;
(L)
requires clear indication of the date of substantial completion on the payment
certification, specifies the punch list provided by the contractor to address
all remaining areas of the project, and documents all known school district
accepted nonconforming work;
(M)
limits required certifications of work requested or required by the school
district to work required under the issuing party's services
agreement;
(N) ensures that
contract terms for design professional services are consistent and aligned and
do not conflict or overlap with regard to contractual responsibilities assigned
to the prime design professional, any design professional of record, the
contractor, any prime subcontractors, a third-party building code compliance
officer, or a third-party special inspector or consultant; and
(O) ensures appropriate specifications or
treatment for the school district's acceptance or acknowledgement of a
contractor's final completion as the owner of the facility.
(g) Standards for space for instructional
facilities.
(1) Minimum standards for common
areas.
(A) Library.
(i) A school district shall consider the
School Library Standards and Guidelines as adopted under TEC, §
33.021, when
developing, implementing, or expanding library services.
(ii) The sum total square footage of all
library-related areas shall meet the following minimum square feet (SF)
requirements based on maximum instructional capacity and may be contiguous or
dispersed:
(I) for 100 students or fewer, a
minimum of 1,400 SF;
(II) for
101-500 students, 1,400 SF plus an additional 4 SF for each student in excess
of 100;
(III) for 501-2,000
students, a minimum of 3,000 SF plus an additional 3 SF for each student in
excess of 500; and
(IV) for 2,001
or more students, a minimum of 7,500 SF plus an additional 2 SF for each
student in excess of 2,000.
(B) Gymnasium. Primary gymnasiums or physical
education space, if required by the school district's educational program,
shall have a minimum of 3,000 SF at the elementary school level, 4,800 SF at
the middle school level, and 7,500 SF at the high school level.
(2) Minimum standards for special
spaces.
(A) Combination science
classroom/laboratory.
(i) A combination
science classroom/laboratory for Kindergarten-Grade 5 must provide a minimum of
50 SF per student. The room may have an established maximum of 22 students but
must not exceed 25. Within the total square footage of the room, 6 SF per
student of horizontal laboratory countertop space (3 feet wide x 2 feet deep)
must be provided at student laboratory benches, and an additional 3 linear feet
(LF) per student of horizontal laboratory countertop support space must be
provided for equipment and materials for investigations, activities, or student
projects.
(ii) A combination
science classroom/laboratory for Grades 6-8 must provide a minimum of 58 SF per
student. The room may have an established maximum of 24 students but must not
exceed 28. Within the total square footage of the room, 6 SF per student of
horizontal laboratory countertop space (3 feet wide x 2 feet deep) must be
provided at student laboratory benches, and an additional 3 LF per student of
horizontal laboratory countertop support space must be provided for equipment
and materials for investigations, activities, or student projects.
(iii) A combination science
classroom/laboratory for Grades 9-12 must provide a minimum of 58 SF per
student. The room may consider a maximum of 24 students but must not exceed 28.
Within the total square footage of the room, 6 SF per student of horizontal
laboratory countertop space (3 feet wide x 2 feet deep) must be provided at
student laboratory benches, and an additional 3 LF per student of horizontal
laboratory countertop support space must be provided for equipment and
materials for investigations, activities, or student projects.
(B) Science laboratory.
(i) The separate science laboratory and
classroom configuration is not permissible at the elementary level.
(ii) A science laboratory for Grades 6-8 must
be a minimum of 42 SF per student. The room must consider a maximum of 24
students but must not exceed 28. Within the total square footage of the room, 6
SF per student of horizontal laboratory countertop space (3 feet wide x 2 feet
deep) must be provided at student laboratory benches, and an additional 3 LF
per student of horizontal laboratory countertop support space must be provided
for equipment and materials for investigations, activities, or student
projects.
(iii) A science
laboratory for Grades 9-12 shall be a minimum of 42 SF per student. The room
must consider a maximum of 24 students but must not exceed 28. Within the total
square footage of the room, 6 SF per student of horizontal laboratory
countertop space (3 feet wide x 2 feet deep) shall be provided at student
laboratory benches, and an additional 3 LF per student of horizontal laboratory
countertop support space shall be provided for equipment and materials for
investigations, activities, or student projects.
(C) Science classrooms. Science classrooms
shall be provided at a ratio not to exceed 2:1 of science classrooms to science
laboratories at the secondary level and must meet the requirements of
subsection (h)(3) of this section. The science laboratories must be located in
close proximity to the science classrooms they serve.
(D) Fume hoods.
(i) Each of the following shall have one
built-in fume hood:
(I) at least one middle
school prep room per grade level served in the school facility;
(II) high school level chemistry or Advanced
Placement (AP) chemistry combination classroom/laboratory or laboratory;
and
(III) prep room serving
chemistry, AP chemistry, or integrated physics and chemistry (IPC) combination
classroom/laboratory or laboratory.
(ii) A double-sided fume hood may be provided
to satisfy chemistry or AP chemistry fume hood requirements.
(iii) The exhaust shall be vented to the
outside, above the roof and away from air vents.
(E) Preparation/storage rooms. One
preparation/storage room at a minimum 10 SF per student shall be provided
adjacent to each combination science classroom/laboratory. One
preparation/storage room at a minimum of 10 SF per student shall be provided
per science classroom and be located adjacent to its partner science
laboratory. Preparation/storage rooms may be combined, but the combination of
more than one preparation/storage room shall not reduce the minimum square feet
or quantity of built-in fume hoods required if they were not
combined.
(F) Chemical storage
room. If hazardous or vaporous chemicals are to be used in a science laboratory
or combination science classroom/laboratory, a separate chemical storage room
shall be provided. The chemical storage room shall be separate from, and shall
not be combined as part of, a preparation room or an equipment storage room;
however, the chemical storage room may be located so that access is through a
preparation room or equipment storage room. The chemical storage room shall be
secure to prevent access to chemicals by students or non-authorized adults. One
chemical storage room may be shared among multiple laboratories or
classrooms/laboratories. Refer to National Fire Protection Association (NFPA),
International Fire Code (IFC), and Occupational Safety and Health
Administration (OSHA) for additional requirements.
(G) Eye/face wash. A built-in eye/face wash
that can wash both eyes simultaneously shall be provided in each room serving
Grades 5-12 where hazardous chemicals or eye irritants are used by instructors
and/or students. The eye/face wash shall comply with the American National
Standards Institute (ANSI) Standards for Shower and Eyewash Equipment (Z358.1).
The tepid water required by ANSI Z358.1 is not required to come from a heated
source; however, school districts that commonly experience lengthy periods of
extremely cold temperatures during the winter season shall consider a tepid
water system with a heated source.
(H) Safety shower. A built-in safety shower
shall be provided in each combination classroom/laboratory, laboratory, or prep
room where a built-in fume hood is required or voluntarily provided. Where a
safety shower is required in both the laboratory and corresponding prep room, a
safety shower may be provided in only the prep room to satisfy this
requirement. The safety shower shall comply with the ANSI Standards for Shower
and Eyewash Equipment (Z358.1). The tepid water required by ANSI Z358.1 is not
required to come from a heated source; however, school districts that commonly
experience lengthy periods of extremely cold temperatures during the winter
season shall consider a tepid water system with a heated source.
(I) Exhaust fan and ventilation system. Refer
to International Mechanical Code, ANSI, OSHA, and NFPA for project
requirements.
(J) Emergency
shut-off controls. If electricity, gas, and/or water are provided in student
areas, emergency shut-off controls shall be provided for each in a location
accessible to the instructor but not easily accessible to students. It shall
not be located at any doorway leading to a corridor or hallway.
(K) Special education. Specialized classrooms
shall be a minimum of 45 SF per student.
(h) Quantitative method of compliance for
instructional facility space requirements. A school district board of trustees
shall approve compliance with this method or the method of compliance described
in subsection (i) of this section before the commencement of design development
for a capital improvement project for an instructional facility.
(1) To satisfy this method of compliance, the
capital improvement project shall meet the minimum aggregate square footage
based on the campus's flexibility level as specified in paragraph (2) of this
subsection, the SF per student as specified in paragraph (3) of this
subsection, and the maximum instructional capacity of the campus included in
the project's educational specifications. Cafeterias, gymnasiums, and library
space may not be used to satisfy this method of compliance. The minimum
aggregate square footage required may be comprised of the following:
(A) mathematics, English/language arts, and
history/social studies classrooms;
(B) combination science
classrooms/laboratories;
(C)
science classrooms, if the separate science classroom and laboratory layout is
used;
(D) special education
classrooms;
(E) collaboration
areas; and
(F) elective classrooms
or laboratories under the following circumstances:
(i) if the elective program necessitates a SF
per student in excess of the value specified in subsection (h)(3) of this
section, a maximum of total square feet for the space shall be used that is
equal to the value specified in (h)(3) of this section multiplied by the
maximum number of students that shall be safely served in that classroom or
laboratory at a time;
(ii) if the
elective classroom or laboratory is used between 51-100% of the school day, at
a factor of 1; and
(iii) if the
elective classroom or laboratory is used between 0-50% percent of the school
day, at a factor of .5.
(2) The level of flexibility of a facility
must be selected by a school district in order to calculate the minimum
aggregate square footage under paragraph (3) of this subsection.
(A) Flexibility Level 1 (L1). Single, fixed
teacher presentation space; compact organization of spaces makes access to
outdoor space limited and challenging; furniture is exclusively attached
student desk/chair with an expectation of very infrequent rearrangement;
minimal multipurpose functionality for walls with no capability of
reconfiguration; teacher-centric digital instruction with partial access to
mobile devices.
(B) Flexibility
Level 2 (L2). Single, fixed teacher presentation space; compact organization of
spaces makes access to outdoor space limited and challenging, but outdoor
spaces may be visible from classrooms; furniture includes detached student
desk/chair with an expectation of very infrequent rearrangement; moderate
multipurpose functionality for walls with no capability of reconfiguration;
teacher-centric digital instruction with moderate access to mobile
devices.
(C) Flexibility Level 3
(L3). Multiple student/teacher presentation spaces; organization of spaces
allows for proximal outdoor access that is visible from classrooms; flexible
and mobile furniture that is easily rearranged; high use of multipurpose walls,
including digital touch screen and other functionalities; learner-centric
digital instruction with high levels of access to a range of mobile
devices.
(D) Flexibility Level 4
(L4). Multiple student/teacher presentation spaces that are likely mobile;
organization of spaces allows for direct outdoor access that is visible from
classrooms; highly flexible and mobile furniture that is easily rearranged by
students independently or collectively; maximized inclusion of multipurpose
walls, including digital capabilities and reconfiguration; learner-centric
digital instruction with high levels of access to a range of mobile devices
incorporating an "anytime/anywhere" instructional philosophy.
(3) The minimum aggregate square
footage shall be determined based on the minimum square footage per student by
campus type and the selected flexibility level approved under paragraph (2) of
this subsection.
(A) Elementary schools
(prekindergarten-Grade 5):
(i) L1 36 SF per
pupil (pp);
(ii) L2 36 SF
pp;
(iii) L3 42 SF pp;
and
(iv) L4 42 SF pp.
(B) Middle schools (Grades 6-8):
(i) L1 32 SF pp;
(ii) L2 32 SF pp;
(iii) L3 36 SF pp; and
(iv) L4 36 SF pp.
(C) High schools (Grades 9-12):
(i) L1 32 SF pp;
(ii) L2 32 SF pp;
(iii) L3 36 SF pp; and
(iv) L4 36 SF pp.
(j) Construction quality standards.
(1) Construction code requirements. A capital
improvement project for a school facility must reasonably comply with the
following construction code requirements.
(A)
Projects located outside of a municipal jurisdiction in the unincorporated area
of a county must reasonably comply with the following requirements.
(i) Where projects are located in a county
that does not have an adopted general building code, projects must reasonably
comply with the International Building Code and the Existing Building Code, as
published by the International Code Council, as they existed on May 1, 2003.
Where projects are located in a county that has an adopted general building
code, projects must reasonably comply with the adopted general building code
and any chapters that were not adopted or removed entirely by amendment from
the adopted model building code. Where a project is located in an area that is
designated as a catastrophe area according to the Texas Department of
Insurance, a project must also reasonably comply with any applicable amendments
to the building code that have been adopted by the Texas Department of
Insurance in accordance with Texas Insurance Code, Chapter 2210.
(ii) Where projects are located in a county
that does not have an adopted mechanical code, projects must reasonably comply
with the International Mechanical Code, as published by the International Code
Council, as it existed on the same date that the applicable International
Building Code was published. Where projects are located in a county that has an
adopted mechanical code, projects must reasonably comply with the adopted
mechanical code.
(iii) Where
projects are located in a county that does not have an adopted fire code,
projects must reasonably comply with the NFPA 101 Life Safety Code and NFPA 1
Fire Code standards adopted by the State Fire Marshal in accordance with TGC,
§417.008, and in accordance with 28 TAC §
34.301(relating to
Purpose). Where projects are located in a county that has an adopted fire code,
projects must reasonably comply with the adopted fire code.
(iv) Where projects are located in a county
that does not have an adopted plumbing code, projects must reasonably comply
with the International Plumbing Code and referenced International Fuel Gas
Code, as published by the International Code Council, as adopted by the Texas
Board of Plumbing Examiners as established in 22 TAC §
367.2(a)
(relating to Code Requirements) in accordance with TOC, Chapter 1301. Where
projects are located in a county that has an adopted plumbing code, projects
must reasonably comply with the adopted plumbing code.
(v) Where projects are located in a county
that does not have an adopted electric code, projects must reasonably comply
with the National Electric Code, as published by the NFPA, as adopted by the
Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation in accordance with TOC, Chapter
1305. Where projects are located in a county that has an adopted electric code,
projects must reasonably comply with the adopted electric code.
(vi) Projects must reasonably comply with the
International Energy Conservation Code, as published by the International Code
Council, as adopted by the State Energy Conservation Office of Texas in
accordance with Texas Health and Safety Code, Chapter 388.
(vii) Projects must reasonably comply with
the International Swimming Pool and Spa Code, as published by the International
Code Council, as it existed on May 1, 2019.
(viii) Projects must reasonably comply with
the industrialized housing and building rules as adopted by the Texas
Commission of Licensing and Regulation in accordance with TOC, Chapter
1202.
(B) Projects
located inside of a municipal jurisdiction must reasonably comply with the
following requirements.
(i) Where projects are
located in a municipality that does not have an adopted general building code,
projects must reasonably comply with the International Building Code and the
International Existing Building Code, as published by the International Code
Council, as they existed on May 1, 2003, in accordance with Local Government
Code, §
214.216.
Where projects are located in a municipality that has an adopted general
building code, projects must reasonably comply with the adopted general
building code. Where a project is located in an area that is designated as a
catastrophe area according to the Texas Department of Insurance, a project must
also comply with any applicable amendments to the building code that have been
adopted by the Texas Department of Insurance in accordance with Texas Insurance
Code, Chapter 2210.
(ii) Where
projects are located in a municipality that does not have an adopted mechanical
code, projects must comply with the International Mechanical Code, as published
by the International Code Council, as it existed on May 1, 2003. Where projects
are located in a municipality that has an adopted mechanical code, projects
must reasonably comply with the adopted mechanical code.
(iii) Where projects are located in a
municipality that does not have an adopted fire code, projects must reasonably
comply with the NFPA 101 Life Safety Code and NFPA 1 Fire Code standards
adopted by the State Fire Marshal in accordance with TGC, §417.008, and in
accordance with 28 TAC §
34.301. Where
projects are located in a municipality that has an adopted fire code, projects
must reasonably comply with the adopted fire code.
(iv) Where projects are located in a
municipality that does not have an adopted plumbing code, projects must
reasonably comply with the International Plumbing Code and referenced
International Fuel Gas Code, as published by the International Code Council, as
adopted by the Texas Board of Plumbing Examiners as established in 22 TAC
§
367.2(a)
in accordance with TOC, Chapter 1301. Where projects are located in a
municipality that has an adopted plumbing code, projects must reasonably comply
with the adopted plumbing code.
(v)
Where projects are located in a municipality that does not have an adopted
electric code, projects must reasonably comply with the National Electric Code,
as published by the NFPA, as adopted by the Texas Department of Licensing and
Regulation in accordance with TOC, Chapter 1305. Where projects are located in
a municipality that has an adopted electric code, projects must reasonably
comply with the adopted electric code.
(vi) Where projects are located in a
municipality that does not have an adopted energy conservation code, projects
must reasonably comply with the International Energy Conservation Code, as
published by the International Code Council, as adopted by the State Energy
Conservation Office of Texas in accordance with Texas Health and Safety Code,
Chapter 388. Where projects are located in a municipality that has an adopted
energy conservation code, projects must reasonably comply with the adopted
energy conservation code.
(vii)
Where projects are located in a municipality that does not have an adopted
swimming pool code, projects must reasonably comply with the International
Swimming Pool and Spa Code, as published by the International Code Council, as
it existed on May 1, 2019. Where projects are located in a municipality that
has an adopted swimming pool code, projects must reasonably comply with the
adopted swimming pool code.
(viii)
Projects must reasonably comply with the industrialized housing and building
rules as adopted by the Texas Commission of Licensing and Regulation in
accordance with TOC, Chapter 1202.
(2) Third-party code compliance requirements.
(A) A school district shall require the prime
design professional of a capital improvement project to submit to the school
district a report identifying any construction code requirements that the prime
design professional believes, to the best of their knowledge after performing
research, will not be enforced by a state or local authority having
jurisdiction.
(B) A school district
shall contract with a third-party code compliance officer to enforce any
construction code requirement identified by a prime design professional
pursuant to subparagraph (A) of this paragraph as not enforced by a state or
local authority having jurisdiction and shall adjust the scope of services
provided by the third-party code compliance officer if an error is discovered
in the prime design professional's report.
(C) A school district shall hire a
third-party code compliance officer to have all of the duties and powers of a
building official, as defined by the required construction codes and to the
extent allowable by state law, to ensure compliance with any required
construction code provisions identified as not enforced by a state or local
jurisdiction with authority pursuant to subparagraphs (A) and (B) of this
paragraph.
(D) In the manner
specified by TGC, §2269.058, a school district shall procure the services
of a third-party code compliance officer required by subsection (j) of this
section as a professional service in accordance with the Texas Professional
Services Procurement Act, as established in TGC, Chapter 2254.
(E) A third-party code compliance officer
must not be a design professional responsible for the design of any portion of
the project, anyone employed by a design professional responsible for the
design of any portion of the project, a contractor responsible for constructing
any portion of the project, or anyone employed by a contractor responsible for
constructing any portion of the project. A third-party code compliance officer
may be a peer reviewer that performs a peer review required for any storm
shelters that are part of the project.
(F) A third-party code compliance officer
must have a Certified Building Official designation from the International Code
Council (ICC). A third-party code compliance officer must also have at least
ten years of experience or equivalent experience as an architect, engineer,
inspector, contractor or superintendent of construction, or any combination of
these, at least five years of which have been supervisory experience.
(G) A plan review performed by or under the
supervision of a third-party code compliance officer must be performed by a
qualified design professional or an independent third party qualified to
certify plans through the ICC for the appropriate building, mechanical,
electrical, or plumbing trade. Plan reviews performed under the supervision of
a third-party code compliance officer must be performed by a person with at
least five years of experience as an engineer or an architect.
(H) The following shall apply to a storm
shelter where a required construction code has a provision requiring a storm
shelter for certain projects.
(i) For the
purposes of determining if a storm shelter is required for a specific building
area, a school district shall require a third-party code compliance officer to
accept, as a modification of the code in lieu of meeting the requirement to
provide a storm shelter for that specific area, any written justification
submitted by the school district that purports that the intended use of the
specific building area that would be served by a storm shelter is not used for
educational purposes during normal school hours when attendance is
mandatory.
(ii) Where a storm
shelter is required for new construction, a school district shall require a
third-party code compliance officer to allow the occupant load for storm
shelter design to be 110% of maximum instructional capacity, as stated by the
designated representative of the school district in writing, even if this is
significantly less than the total occupant load used for other purposes such as
fire egress.
(iii) Where a storm
shelter is required for additions, a school district shall require a
third-party code compliance officer to allow the occupant load for storm
shelter design to be based on, prorating where only a portion of the school
facility is considered, 110% of maximum instructional capacity, as stated by
the designated representative of the school district in writing, even if this
is significantly less than the total occupant load used for other purposes such
as fire egress.
(iv) For the
purposes of determining if a storm shelter can serve the occupants of a
building that is located at a distance from the storm shelter that is greater
than a code-required maximum distance, a school district shall require a
third-party code compliance officer to accept, as a modification of the code in
lieu of meeting the specific distance requirement, any written emergency
operations plan submitted by the school district that purports to provide early
notification to those occupants. School districts may use protections provided
in TEC, §
37.108,
to protect sensitive information.
(v) For the purposes of determining if a
storm shelter is required to be constructed at a school facility where
applicable construction codes require a storm shelter and a modular building be
installed as part of the project, a school district shall require a third-party
code compliance officer to consider as new construction any modular building
that is installed as part of the project, regardless of whether it is
relocatable.
(3) Other requirements.
(A) A capital improvement project for a
school facility subject to the standards in this section must comply with the
2010 Americans with Disabilities Act Standards for Accessible Design as well as
the Texas Accessibility Standards of 2012.
(B) A school district shall notify a design
professional in writing of any construction-related standard or expectation of
the school district for the project that is not otherwise established or
required by an applicable construction code as required in this subjection.
Where a school district contracts with a design professional and that design
professional subcontracts another design professional, the school district need
only notify the design professional that has a contract with the school
district.
(C) A school district
shall consider as part of a capital improvement project the use of designs,
methods, and materials that will reduce the potential for indoor air quality
problems. A school district may use the voluntary indoor air quality guidelines
adopted by the Texas Department of State Health Services under Texas Health and
Safety Code, Chapter 385; the "Indoor Air Quality Tools for Schools" program
administered by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency; or some other updated
state approved guidelines or standards for indoor air quality in response to
communicable disease related public health issues.
(D) A school district shall consider as part
of a capital improvement project the use of sustainable school designs. A
sustainable design is a design that minimizes a facility's impact on the
environment through energy and resource efficiency.
(k) Safety and security standards.
(1) Compliance requirements applicable to all
instructional facilities campus-wide. A capital improvement project of a school
district or an open-enrollment charter school must include campus-wide
implementation of the following provisions.
(A) Communications infrastructure. In
accordance with TEC, §
37.108,
a school district or an open-enrollment charter school shall:
(i) develop a multi-hazard plan that provides
measures to ensure that school district communications technology and
infrastructure are adequate to allow for communication during an
emergency;
(ii) implement measures
to ensure every classroom and portable classroom provides district employees,
including substitute teachers, access to a telephone, cellular telephone, or
other electronic communications device to allow immediate contact with district
emergency services or emergency services agencies, law enforcement agencies,
health departments, and fire departments; and
(iii) develop site plans and floor plans for
a school facility in accordance with TEC, §
37.108(f).
(B) Access control. A school
district or an open-enrollment charter school shall develop a document that
designates each exterior door of each instructional facility campus-wide as
either primary, secondary, or non-designated entrances and shall ensure that
the documented designation of all exterior doors becomes part of the long-range
facility plan prior to commencement of construction of a capital improvement
project.
(2) Additional
standards based on the project construction budget. A school district shall
approve a project construction budget for a capital improvement project at
completion of the design development phase of the project and prior to
commencement of the construction documents phase. The project construction
budget approved by the school district shall determine how many of the
additional safety and security standards established in paragraph (3) of this
subsection are required for the project. A school district shall designate in
writing which of the additional safety and security standards in paragraph (3)
of this subsection have been approved by the school district board of trustees
for a capital improvement project and shall provide to the prime design
professional and each design professional of record written documentation of
the approved safety and security standards for the proposed facility prior to
commencement of the construction documents phase of a capital improvement
project. The following standards shall apply to a capital improvement project
for an instructional facility until all instructional facilities campus-wide
fully comply with all of the additional safety and security standards specified
in this subsection.
(A) If a project
construction budget is $1 million to $5 million, the facility is required to
comply with at least one additional safety and security standard specified in
paragraph (3) of this subsection.
(B) If a project construction budget is $5
million to $10 million, the facility is required to comply with at least two
additional safety and security standards specified in paragraph (3) of this
subsection.
(C) If a project
construction budget is over $10 million, the facility is required to comply
with all of the additional safety and security standards specified in paragraph
(3) of this subsection.
(D) For a
capital improvement project that includes new construction, the new
construction of an instructional facility is required to comply with all three
of the additional safety and security standards specified in paragraph (3) of
this subsection.
(3)
Additional safety and security standards applicable to all instructional
facilities campus-wide. A school district or an open-enrollment charter school
must include campus-wide implementation of the following standards in
accordance with terms and requirements of paragraph (2) of this subsection.
(A) Exterior door numbering. All
instructional facilities campus-wide, including portable, modular buildings,
must include the addition of graphically represented alpha-numerical characters
on both the interior and exterior of each exterior door location. The
characters may be installed on the door, or on at least one door at locations
where more than one door leads from the exterior to the same room inside the
facility, or on the wall immediately adjacent to or above the door location.
Characters shall comply with the IFC, §505. The primary entrance of an
instructional facility, as defined by subsection (a)(23)(A) of this section,
shall always be the first in the entire sequence and is the only door location
that does not require numbering. The numbering sequence shall be clockwise and
may be sequenced for the entire campus or for each facility individually. The
design professional of record shall coordinate with school district personnel
and local emergency response personnel prior to incorporating exterior door
numbering characters and locations into the contract documents for the facility
or facilities specified to be included in a capital improvement project. The
design professional of record shall coordinate this requirement with any and
all accessibility requirements related to signage.
(B) Visitor management. All primary entrances
of instructional facilities campus-wide must include the following:
(i) an unobstructed line of sight of
approaching visitors through physical or digital means;
(ii) a physical barrier that prevents
unassisted access to the facility by a visitor; and
(iii) a location for a visitor check-in and
check-out process.
(C)
Security cameras. All primary and secondary entrances of instructional
facilities campus-wide must include a security camera.
(4) Exceptions to additional standards based
on cost. A school district may opt out of the requirements specified in
paragraph (2) of this subsection if:
(A) the
facility is scheduled to, according to the long-range facilities plan, cease
operations as an instructional facility within three years of the project;
and
(B) the five-year long-range
facility plan clearly states that, prior to the end date of the plan, the
facility will be compliant with at least two additional safety and security
standards specified in paragraph (2) of this subsection if ceasing operation
does not occur or operation resumes. The long-range facility plan must specify
which two additional safety and security standards will be
implemented.
(5) Public
disclosure process. A school district board of trustees or open-enrollment
charter school governing body shall ensure information or documents collected,
developed, or produced by the district as part of a capital improvement project
are reviewed to ensure that any project-specific safety and security
information is adjusted for disclosure if necessary to accommodate the
requirement for a district to use protections provided in TEC, §
37.108,
which directs the school district to protect sensitive information, while also
providing general information to the public indicating district compliance
commitments made in accordance with this subsection.