SERIES: Aligning facilities management with agency mission

Building for the future while serving today's needs

Aligning capital projects with mission, data, and community priorities


By Jeff Bonvechio

As a school district leader, you’re constantly balancing the urgency of today’s needs with the long-term vision for your students, staff, and community. Every facility decision you make—every roof replaced, classroom added, or building renovated—is an opportunity to advance your mission. When you align your capital investments with strategic goals, you’re not just fixing buildings. You’re creating learning environments that empower achievement, support equity, and reflect the values of your community. To make the most of your capital investments, consider these five strategies that will help you align facilities planning with your district’s mission and long-term priorities.

1. Aligning capital projects with strategic goals

Capital projects should be more than reactive fixes; they should be intentional choices that help your district fulfill its mission. Consider the following:

  • Anchoring your facility priorities in your district’s strategic plan, instructional goals, and community commitments.
  • Using long-range planning to consider how demographic shifts, enrollment changes, and program evolution will shape future facility needs.
  • Bringing together leaders from academic, operational, and financial departments to ensure facility planning supports educational outcomes—not just physical conditions.

Your buildings should serve your educational vision—not the other way around.

2. Prioritizing projects through data-driven assessments

With limited resources, tough decisions are inevitable. Data gives you the clarity to make those decisions confidently. Start by using tools like:

  • Facilities condition assessments (FCAs): These provide an objective baseline for building systems, infrastructure, and asset condition.
  • Educational suitability assessments: These help determine how well your spaces support instruction, accessibility, and student experience.
  • Prioritization frameworks: Consider a scoring model that weighs condition, educational impact, equity, and cost-efficiency to guide and prioritize your decisions.

By using data, you can justify your priorities to your board, your community, and your funding partners.

3. Funding strategies and financial planning

Even the strongest vision needs funding to become reality. That means crafting a financial strategy that matches your goals, timelines, and community appetite. Options may include:

  • Local bonds and capital levies
  • Lease financing or certificates of participation
  • State funding and competitive grant programs
  • Joint-use partnerships with municipalities or nonprofits
  • Energy performance contracting for infrastructure upgrades

Tip: Align your funding plan with your capital improvement plan to reduce gaps, anticipate escalation, and preserve flexibility for the unexpected. Many district leaders find success by layering multiple funding streams and building contingency reserves into their capital strategy.

4. Community engagement and transparency

You can’t build trust without communication. Community support is critical—especially when you’re asking for funding or making visible changes to schools. What works:

  • Start early. Use community meetings, surveys, and student forums to gather input before decisions are made.
  • Be transparent. Share your assessment data, scoring criteria, and project goals with stakeholders in digestible language.
  • Stay connected. Offer regular updates and a point of contact throughout planning, construction, and completion to show progress and accountability.

When your community feels heard, they’re far more likely to support your vision—and your bond measures.

5. Sustainability and resilience

Today’s capital investments need to stand the test of time—and climate. That means designing buildings that are energy-efficient, healthy, and resilient. To get there:

  • Incorporate sustainable systems like energy-efficient HVAC, solar-ready roofs, and daylighting strategies.
  • Use industry frameworks like LEED, WELL, or CHPS to guide green school design.
  • Design for long-term resilience: backup power, flood protection, and indoor air quality should be part of every plan.

These aren’t just environmental decisions—they’re strategic ones that lower long-term costs and safeguard student well-being.

Make every dollar count

As an educator AND a leader, you’re entrusted with stewarding your district’s resources, reputation, and future. Capital improvements are one of the most powerful tools to shape that future. By aligning your projects with your mission, using data to drive decisions, engaging your community, and planning for resilience, you can turn facilities into a force for transformation—not just maintenance.

At Brailsford & Dunlavey, we’ve partnered with school districts across the country to navigate exactly these challenges. Whether you’re launching a districtwide master plan, preparing for a bond campaign, or figuring out how to prioritize limited capital, our team is here to help you move from uncertainty to action.

Your schools—and your students—deserve facilities that reflect the excellence you’re striving to deliver. Let’s build that future together!


Jeff Bonvechio, Regional Vice President at Brailsford & Dunlavey since 2018, brings 20 years of experience in planning, designing, and constructing public education, recreation, and library facilities. As Director of Capital Projects for major DC Government agencies, he managed budgets up to $500 million and oversaw the development or renovation of 17 LEED Gold-certified neighborhood libraries. Jeff holds a B.S. in Civil Engineering from Ohio University and is affiliated with the Urban Land Institute’s Leadership Institute, the Construction Owners Association of America, the American Society of Professional Engineers, and the American Society of Civil Engineers. Jeff can be reached at JBonvechio@bdconnect.com.