Next month, Prince George’s County Public Schools (PGCPS) is scheduled to open the Colin L. Powell K-8 Academy in Fort Washington, Md., a 233,865-ft school with an occupancy of 2,000, whose construction budget is $106.2 million, according to the school district.
This is one of six schools that were built under PGCPS’s Blueprint Schools Program, a collaborative public-private partnership that has significantly reduced the schools’ construction time and cost.
The five other schools, which opened last August, are the 144,800-sf Drew-Freeman Middle School for classes 6-8 in Hillcrest Heights, Md.; the 162,610-sf Hyatt Middle School in Hyattsville, Md.; the 144,800-sf Kenmore School in Landover, Md., for 1,200 6th through 8th graders; the 144,800-sf Sonia Sotomayor Middle School in Adelphi, Md.; and the 144,800-sf Walker Mill Middle School in Capital Heights, Md., with a 1,200-person capacity.
In addition to STEAM labs with 3D printers and robotics, each Blueprint school will feature a video production studio, community clinics, and media center. The schools are solar- and electric vehicle charging-ready, with solar installation slated for completion in the fall of 2024. Hyattsville includes a black-box theater. And Colin Powell will have an elementary library, four Pre-K classrooms, and auxiliary gym, and innovation lab.
Commitment to diversity
The P3, known as Prince George’s County Education and Community Partners (PGCECP), delivered these schools in just 2½ years. Without this P3 agreement, it would have taken 16 years to fund and build them, according to Bob Hunt, Group Managing Director-Government, Education, and Non Profit Advisory for JLL, which served as the technical and financial advisor to PGCPS.
The P3 team includes development and financing members Fengate Asset Management and Gilbane Development Company, Gilbane Building Company (lead design-builder), Stantec (architect and design lead), and Honeywell (lead services provider).

The Blueprint program’s planning, outreach, and support are geared toward increasing opportunities for small businesses, county-based businesses, and minority business enterprises. Scopes of work are created, and larger contracts are unbundled, to expand these businesses’ participation. This includes ongoing prequalification for all anticipated contracts for each key team member.
As of August 2023, PGCECP had exceeded its goal by awarding $134 million, or one-third, of its contracts for the schools built under Blueprint to Minority-owned businesses such as Arel Architects, which is part of the P3’s design team and has a mentor-protégé relationship with Stantec. Warren Builds Construction and Corenic Construction Group have similar arrangements with Gilbane. Three|E Consulting Group, a county-based business, serves as the economic inclusion and compliance team.
The next phase with more partners
Under a traditional design-bid-build contract, PGCPS estimates that the six schools would have cost an aggregate $868.8 million to design and construct. The schools in the Blueprint program were completed for a total of $485.8 million and include 30 years of facilities maintenance from Honeywell, which must adhere to MBE/CBB procurement requirements. PGCPS projects a savings of $170 million over three decades, compared to the traditional model.
Phase II of the Blueprint program will deliver eight more schools that further meet the needs of the district's 133,000 students and nearly 20,000 employees. Prince George’s County Education Collective was recently selected as Phase II’s final bidder. The Collective consists of equity members Plenary Americas US Holdings and Ellis Don Capital; MBE equity member Phoenix Infrastructure Group Investments, lead contractor MCN Build, and lead service providers US Facilities, Ellis Don Facilities Services, and RSC Electrical and Mechanical.
Related Stories
Architects | Apr 6, 2023
New tool from Perkins&Will will make public health data more accessible to designers and architects
Called PRECEDE, the dashboard is an open-source tool developed by Perkins&Will that draws on federal data to identify and assess community health priorities within the U.S. by location. The firm was recently awarded a $30,000 ASID Foundation Grant to enhance the tool.
Architects | Apr 6, 2023
Design for belonging: An introduction to inclusive design
The foundation of modern, formalized inclusive design can be traced back to the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) in 1990. The movement has developed beyond the simple rules outlined by ADA regulations resulting in features like mothers’ rooms, prayer rooms, and inclusive restrooms.
Education Facilities | Apr 3, 2023
Oklahoma’s Francis Tuttle Technology Center opens academic center for affordable education and training
Oklahoma’s Francis Tuttle Technology Center, which provides career-specific training to adults and high school students, has completed its Francis Tuttle Danforth Campus—a two-story, 155,000-sf academic building. The project aims to fill the growing community’s rising demand for affordable education and training.
K-12 Schools | Mar 6, 2023
Benefitting kids through human-centric high school design
Ingrid Krueger, AIA, LEED AP, shares why empathetic, well-designed spaces are critical in high schools.
Sustainability | Mar 2, 2023
The next steps for a sustainable, decarbonized future
For building owners and developers, the push to net zero energy and carbon neutrality is no longer an academic discussion.
K-12 Schools | Feb 18, 2023
Atlanta suburb opens $85 million serpentine-shaped high school designed by Perkins&Will
In Ellenwood, Ga., a southeast suburb of Atlanta, Perkins and Will has partnered with Clayton County Public Schools and MEJA Construction to create a $85 million secondary school. Morrow High School, which opened in fall 2022, serves more than 2,200 students in Clayton County, a community with students from over 30 countries.
K-12 Schools | Feb 11, 2023
An elementary school in Canada for intellectually challenged kids completes a three-year-long facelift
Last fall, the Yaldei School in Montreal, Quebec, which provides education and therapy to children ages 4 through 16 with intellectual disabilities, completed a $4.5 million renovation of the three-story former parochial school that it had moved into in 2016. The goal of this project, by the firm Stendel + Reich Architecture, was to create spaces that relieve students’ anxiety and make things fun.
Giants 400 | Feb 9, 2023
New Giants 400 download: Get the complete at-a-glance 2022 Giants 400 rankings in Excel
See how your architecture, engineering, or construction firm stacks up against the nation's AEC Giants. For more than 45 years, the editors of Building Design+Construction have surveyed the largest AEC firms in the U.S./Canada to create the annual Giants 400 report. This year, a record 519 firms participated in the Giants 400 report. The final report includes 137 rankings across 25 building sectors and specialty categories.
Giants 400 | Feb 6, 2023
2022 Reconstruction Sector Giants: Top architecture, engineering, and construction firms in the U.S. building reconstruction and renovation sector
Gensler, Stantec, IPS, Alfa Tech, STO Building Group, and Turner Construction top BD+C's rankings of the nation's largest reconstruction sector architecture, engineering, and construction firms, as reported in the 2022 Giants 400 Report.
K-12 Schools | Jan 25, 2023
As gun incidents grow, schools have beefed up security significantly in recent years
Recently released federal data shows that U.S. schools have significantly raised security measures in recent years. About two-thirds of public schools now control access to school grounds—not just the building—up from about half in the 2017-18 school year.