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How Educational Institutions Are Rethinking Library and Campus Storage for Modern Learning Environments

Key Takeaways:

  • Modern educational environments require storage infrastructure that supports flexibility, collection growth, and the diverse equipment needs of active campuses.
  • Library shelving systems must balance collection accessibility, capacity growth, and the evolving role of the library as a collaborative learning space.
  • Classroom and campus storage solutions need to support reconfigurable learning environments without consuming the flexible space that modern pedagogy requires.
  • McMurray Stern designs and installs storage systems for educational institutions across California, with solutions tailored to library, classroom, athletic, and administrative environments.

Introduction

The physical environment of education is changing, and the storage infrastructure that supports it is struggling to keep pace. Classrooms that were once rows of fixed desks are becoming flexible learning environments that can be reconfigured for individual work, small group collaboration, and whole-class instruction within the same session. Libraries that once housed primarily static print collections are becoming multimedia learning centers, maker spaces, and collaborative study environments while still maintaining and growing physical collections that students and faculty rely on.

These changes create new storage requirements. Flexible classrooms need storage solutions that hold materials, equipment, and furniture without consuming the reconfigurable space that flexible learning depends on. Libraries need shelving systems that can accommodate growing collections within fixed footprints while supporting the changing use of library space. And across campuses, the diverse equipment needs of athletics, science, arts, and administrative functions require storage solutions designed for each environment's specific requirements.

For educational institutions navigating these changes, the storage infrastructure supporting learning environments is no longer just a background facility concern; it's a direct enabler of the educational experience.

Library Shelving: Supporting Collections and Evolving Spaces

The library is the storage environment where the tension between collection growth and space transformation is most acute. Physical collections continue to grow even as digital resources expand, and the expectation that libraries will maintain accessible physical archives doesn't diminish with the addition of digital services. At the same time, libraries are being asked to provide more collaborative space, more study environments, and more maker spaces, all within the same physical footprint.

Purpose-built library shelving systems address this tension through several approaches:

  • High-density compact shelving: Mobile shelving systems that eliminate fixed aisles dramatically increase collection storage capacity within existing library footprints, recovering floor space that can be repurposed for collaborative and active learning areas without reducing collection accessibility.
  • Adjustable shelving configurations: Library shelving that accommodates different collection formats, oversized art books, periodicals, multimedia materials, and standard volumes without requiring separate fixed shelving for each category provides the flexibility that diverse library collections require.
  • Modular shelving systems that can be reconfigured: As library space uses evolve, shelving systems that can be reorganized without full replacement protect the initial investment and support changing space priorities over time.
  • Specialty shelving for media and AV materials: Modern library collections include audiovisual materials, digital media, and specialized formats that standard book shelving doesn't accommodate well. Purpose-built media shelving keeps these materials organized and accessible.

Classroom and Learning Space Storage

The shift toward flexible and active learning environments creates a specific storage challenge: how to keep the materials, technology, and equipment that learning requires organized and accessible without constraining the open, reconfigurable space that flexible learning depends on.

Classroom storage solutions for modern educational environments typically include:

  • Wall-mounted and perimeter storage systems that keep floor space open for reconfigurable furniture arrangements, keeping materials organized without placing storage in the middle of the learning environment
  • Mobile storage carts and movable shelving that can be repositioned as classroom configuration changes, supporting the flexibility of the learning environment rather than constraining it
  • Secure technology storage for Chromebooks, tablets, and other devices, organized, charged, and accessible when needed, without consuming workspace during learning activities
  • Supply and materials storage are organized by subject or activity type, making materials retrieval fast and returning them systematically, so teachers spend time on instruction rather than logistics.

Campus Equipment and Specialty Storage Environments

Beyond libraries and classrooms, educational campuses manage diverse storage requirements across athletics, science, arts, and administrative functions, each with requirements that generic storage solutions don't address well.

Athletic equipment storage for schools and universities presents challenges similar to those of professional athletics facilities: high volume, seasonal variability, diverse equipment categories, and security requirements for high-value gear. Purpose-built athletic storage systems, including equipment room shelving, gear storage lockers, and high-density uniform storage, improve organization and protect equipment investments.

Science and laboratory storage must meet safety requirements for chemical storage while maintaining the organized accessibility that active lab environments require. Laboratory casework and specialized chemical storage solutions provide the structural integrity, material compatibility, and organizational capability that standard commercial shelving cannot offer in laboratory settings.

Arts program storage for instruments, canvases, costumes, and production equipment requires configurations that protect delicate and valuable items while maintaining accessibility for active programs. Instrument storage cabinets, art storage racks, and production equipment shelving are purpose-built for these requirements.

Planning Educational Storage as a Long-Term Investment

Educational institutions operate on long planning cycles and constrained capital budgets, which makes storage infrastructure decisions that will serve for decades more important than those made in environments where frequent replacement is feasible. Modular, expandable systems that can grow with collections and adapt to changing uses protect institutional investment while supporting the evolving needs of learning environments.

McMurray Stern works with K-12 districts, community colleges, and universities across California to design storage systems that address the specific requirements of each campus environment. Our team brings experience across library shelving, classroom storage, athletics, laboratory, and administrative environments, ensuring that each area of the campus receives a solution designed for its requirements rather than a generic system adapted to fit.

Contact McMurray Stern to learn how purpose-built educational storage solutions can support better learning environments, maximize campus space, and protect institutional storage investment over the long term.

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About Rudresh Jhaveri

Rudresh Jhaveri is an Automation Engineer and Design Consultant at McMurray Stern, where he focuses on developing and implementing automated storage and industrial solutions. Based in Santa Fe Springs, California, he contributes to projects involving warehouse automation, robotics, and high-density storage systems that improve operational efficiency.

He began his academic journey at California State Polytechnic University, Pomona, building a foundation in engineering and technical problem-solving. With a background that blends engineering principles and real-world design consulting, Rudresh supports clients in optimizing workflows and modernizing facilities.

Known for his analytical mindset and hands-on approach, he plays a key role in translating complex operational needs into practical, scalable automation solutions within the material handling and storage industry.

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