Fourteen interior design students at Southeast Missouri State University are creating practical kitchen designs for a new mens transition house operated by St. James A.M.E. Church in Cape Girardeau.
The students are learning to apply their classroom knowledge and skills to a real design as part of their basic kitchen and bath course, said Carol Nesler, Southeast instructor of interior design.
This practical, real world opportunity to design a physical space was brought to Nesler by Jessica Livingston, project manager for the mens transition house and 2008 Southeast graduate with a major in interior design, who wanted to provide a unique opportunity for current Southeast students.
The students have visited the unfinished mens transition house several times to take measurements and have met with church officials to develop designs that meet the needs of the transition houses future residents.
As well as doing drafting, we are working on our presentation skills while learning how to present our ideas and sketches to a client. We are taking feedback that theyve given us and applying it to our plans to meet our clients needs, said Megan Thompson, a junior interior design major from Red Bud, Illinois.
The students presented their preliminary designs to the Rev. Renita Green at St. James A.M.E., and Livingston. After receiving feedback, the students are building models of the kitchen they designed and are applying skills that they will one day need as interior designers.
Weve had to follow the National Kitchen and Bath Association guidelines, said Rachel Wichern, a sophomore interior design major from Jackson, Missouri. Weve gone over how to use the principles and elements of design in our kitchen and how to cater our designs to the basic needs of the client.
McKenna Medlin, a senior interior design major from Glen Carbon, Illinois, says that through the project shes gained practical experience in a way that benefits the community.
The transition house is going to be used to help the homeless or people just out of prison to get back on their feet, she said.
Later this semester, the students will present their models and final design plans to Livingston and church officials, who may select one design or combine features from multiple designs, said Nesler. Plans are underway to have the students help install the kitchen next spring.
I think its really cool to take part in experiential learning, Medlin said. Weve had to think about this as a real kitchen. Weve had to think about how theyll use the space. I love how were getting experience in a class that some dont get until an internship or first job.
Top Photo Caption: In the top row, from left, are Instructor Carol Nesler and students McKenna Medlin, Megan Thompson, Amber Elbe, Emily Zerbonia and Jill Olson. In the front row, from left, are students Kelvin Johnson, Ashley White, Tabitha Tanner, Leah Schnurbusch, Jordan Gentry, Rachel Wichern, Emmy Bolen, Shayna Walker and Sam Snyder.
