300 likes | 411 Views
The Importance of Managing Space Effectively. Frances Mueller Assistant Vice Provost for Academic & Budgetary Affairs. APPA Senior Facilities Officers Summit – Minneapolis, MN | August 1, 2013. Topics Covered. Space: a critical resource University of Michigan story Challenges
E N D
The Importance of Managing Space Effectively Frances MuellerAssistant Vice Provost for Academic & Budgetary Affairs APPA Senior Facilities Officers Summit – Minneapolis, MN | August 1, 2013
Topics Covered • Space: a critical resource • University of Michigan story • Challenges • Approach • Results • Key takeaways
Quick Networking Activity • REDNo space management practices, data, or policies in place. • YELLOWLoosely structured space management practices in place. Some space data or a few policies exist. • GREENComprehensive space management practices, database, and policies in place and used regularly.
Space: A Critical Resource • Needed to advance the mission of our organizations • Important for recruitment & retention • Important for economic development However… • Finite & expensive • Politically sensitive • Challenging to manage with changing needs & constrained resources
Changing Needs: Academic Lectures Low tech Individual work Interactive High tech Team-based work NCSU SCALE-UP Classroom
Changing Needs: Research Independent Dedicated space Dedicated equipment Collaborative Interdisciplinary Shared space & equipment
Changing Needs: Student Life In-person services Dining halls Studying alone Online services Dine anywhere 24/7 & collaborative studying
Facility Challenges Space that may be… Buildings that vary in… Outdated Not enough Too much of the wrong space or State-of-the-art and just right… for now Age Architecture & construction Condition Infrastructure Level of energy efficiency
Space: It’s Really Expensive Every square foot adds costs for: • Power requirements • HVAC • Hazardous waste disposal • IT infrastructure • Utilities • Maintenance & upkeep
University of Michigan – Ann Arbor • 42,700 students • 24,800 faculty & staff(excluding hospital) • 602 buildings • 540+ general classrooms • 32.6 million gsf overall • 17.1 million gsf of General Fund space(supported by tuition & taxpayer $$)
Financial Challenges • Unpredictable, declining funding • State of Michigan • Donor gifts • Research funding • Unpredictable, rising energy costs • Significant building growth for 10 years(average annual growth ~ 2%)
Cultural Challenges • Decentralized environment • Few pressing space constraints • Reluctance to share space • Campus perception that space is a • “Owned” by individual schools & departments vs. an institutional resource • “Free good” So what do we do??
Campus-Wide Space Utilization Initiative • Multi-year initiative from 2007 to 2011 • Part of U-M cost containment • Goals: • Limit need for future expansion • Limit average annual square footage growth to <1% • Leverage highest quality spaces to advance our academic mission • Reduce environmental impact
Approach • Foundational tools • Policies & processes • Data, systems, & management reporting • Culture change • Increase sharing • Repurpose existing space • Reminders that space is an institutional resource
Policies & Processes • Capital projects • Research space • Office space • Classroom scheduling
Data & Reporting • System enhancements • Increased data collection • Standardized reporting
Data & Reporting Example • CLASSROOM UTILIZATION • Helps us determine: • How our classrooms are used & opportunities for • increasing activities • sharing • converting to other uses • Facility schedules: • building fans • custodial work • room, equipment repairs
Data & Reporting Example (cont.) • MEDICAL SCHOOL • Uses space and financial data + geographic information system (GIS) to: • Determine space allocations • Determine productivity within research space • Identify opportunities to reassign space, if needed
Strategic & Creative Solutions: It’s Good to Share! • Classrooms • All general purpose classrooms available for shared use (8-5) • Piloted evening use by Washtenaw Community College • Computer server rooms • Vivaria(space for animal subjects) • Public/private partnerships • Requirement to share space whenever central funding is used
Strategic & Creative Solutions: Repurposing Space to Other Uses Financial Impact Examples • Off-campus University-owned buildings to • Collections complex • Studio complex • Classrooms & library stacks to • Test-taking facilities • Collaborative space • Other higher priority academic needs • Avoids construction & leasing costs in the tensofmillions
Cross-Functional Partnerships Ensures everyone is on the same page, has the same goals, and has an opportunity to provide input
Impact on Square Footage Growth Cost Avoidance Taking a more strategic approach to campus growth & slowing our building growth to below 1% enabled us to avoid: • $616 million in one-time capital costs • $24 million in annual operating costs
Impact on Energy Consumption Slower building growth + campus energy conservation efforts results in one-time cost reductions of over $31m Electric Steam
Summary of Our Approach Approach • Foundation, tools for effective space management • Disciplined processes for space expansion • Greater sharing of facilities • Conversion of poor quality & underutilized space to higher priority needs Results • Significant reduction in building growth • Contributions to reduced energy consumption • Shift in campus culture
Take a Holistic Approach to Space Management Raises campus awareness & helps to change the campus culture
Summary A good foundation of data, policies, process, etc. is key to effective space management & utilization The foundation supports strategic decisions that can shift the campus to a culture of greater space stewardship & contain space costs
For more information www.provost.umich.edu/space francesm@umich.edu APPA Senior Facilities Officers Summit – August 1, 2013 | 30