Schools that work.
For Everyone in Them
Most school buildings were designed for a different era of schooling and a different understanding of what students need. The facility backlog is real. So is the pressure from families who want something better, and from boards trying to balance it against a tight budget.
Arcis Studio works at the intersection of educational research, spatial design, and community engagement. We help districts get specific about what their buildings should do, so that when the vote comes, the community already believes.
What We Do
The conversation that often does not happen in facilities planning is about what a building is actually doing to learning.
Whether the layout makes it easy for a teacher to support three different kinds of work at once. Whether students can find a quiet place to focus without leaving campus. Whether the route from the bus drop-off to first period feels like an arrival or an obstacle course.
Arcis Studio brings that conversation forward. It’s What We Do. These are the ways we do it.
Experience Delivered with Intention. Guided by Purpose.
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Before a single square foot gets designed, districts need a clear picture of what they are building toward and why. We run immersive workshops with educators, students, and community members, analyze facility conditions and utilization data, and help leadership translate community input into coherent priorities.
The result is a planning framework that holds up under scrutiny: in board meetings, public forums, and bond campaigns. The districts with the most clarity going into a bond measure are the ones that got specific beforehand. We help build that case from the inside out.
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We design schools and educational spaces that work. Flexible classroom configurations that do not require a renovation every time pedagogy shifts. Circulation routes that make the school feel navigable rather than institutional. Common areas wide enough for a student to stop and talk without blocking traffic.
We design for the daily experience of being in a building, not for the rendering. That means thinking about the Monday morning when a teacher is navigating a room with students who have different needs, and making sure the building helps rather than gets in the way.
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Real engagement means more than a public meeting with a comment sheet. It means finding formats where people can respond to real choices: seeing a layout option and saying what works and what does not, understanding a trade-off and weighing in with something more than a general preference.
We design engagement processes that generate usable information and build genuine ownership of the outcome. Communities support what they understand and helped shape.
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Our design decisions draw from environmental psychology, healthy building research, and educational precedent. We can explain why a particular lighting approach in a reading room affects attention, or why a specific corridor width changes whether students stop and connect or keep moving.
That knowledge shapes every recommendation we make. We bring it as context, not authority, alongside what educators and community members know from direct experience.
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Arcis is building a suite of tools to help districts make better facility decisions: scheduling and utilization analysis, AI-assisted educational specifications, and engagement tools that help communities see themselves in the vision for their schools.
These are practical tools for the real work of planning, not slide decks.
Engagement & Approach
We Work With School Communities
School leaders carry complex, high-stakes decisions—balancing immediate needs with long-term vision. We help clarify priorities early, so facility decisions reflect what matters most.
We Work With Architectural Design Teams
Architecture teams excel at design. We ensure those designs align with how schools actually function—connecting educational goals to spatial decisions where it matters most.
Thought Leadership.
Insights. Storytelling.
Stay connected with ARCIS STUDIO.
A monthly briefing on how educational priorities shape design decisions.

