Press release from Chattahoochee Technical College:
August 13, 2020
by Anita Mashburn
Chattahoochee Tech’s in-house design scholars have made the world a brighter position for a child with special desires through an elegant assignment that was held in partnership with the nonprofit Sunshine one day in Ranney.
A photo taken in January 2020 in his first design montage for his elegance project is academics with lead instructor Ginger Burton.
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Long description Here, in a photo taken in January 2020 before the coronavirus pandemic, the academics of the Chattahoochee Tech Interiors program are shown with lead instructor Ginger Burton (back row, third from right) in their first design montage for this elegance project.
This team of nine Chattahoochee Tech academics planned each and every detail of a dream room with wheelchair access and a break room renovation for 10-year-old Caitlin Davis. A major revelation took place on Tuesday, August 12 at night, with a television crew on site to help capture the moment she and her parents first saw their new bedroom and bathroom. His home is located in Alpharetta, a short drive from the Chattahoochee Tech Woodstock campus, where the university’s internal design program is based.
“We like to have a network partner, and especially a nonprofit organization, that we can while we revel in the real world for our students,” said Ginger Burton, who is the lead instructor of the university’s Interiors program. “Every student has made a significant contribution and worked very well as a team!”
To create an aesthetic and functional design, academics focused conscientiously on each and every detail of the design, as well as on the overview of assignment management. They looked for fabrics ranging from tiles, grout, countertops and paint to soft accessories and wallpaper. They also met with suppliers, many of whom donated the obligatory parts for this task. In addition, these academics used AutoCAD, a computer-aided design technology, to create traditional forms of roof-softening butterflies, which were then cut through computer-driven virtual machines (CNCs).
“Working in this industry is, in fact, rewarding, and the maximum number of new academics is surprised by the point of detail, making the plans and technical wisdom they need,” Burton said. “We go far beyond the variety of colors and decoration, and we provide a fundamental piece in the way our interior spaces are built and used. Good design hides strategy and only shows a charming lifestyle for our home and business.
Among the Chattahoochee Tech scholars who applied for this assignment of elegance was Cassie Keeling, who graduated last spring with an associate’s degree in interior science implemented. She is now hired full-time through Ecraft, a local company specializing in residential renovation and new home construction, which also presented its for this assignment.
“When we were first brought into the scope of the project, I was very excited that we could give back to the community,” Keeling said. “The other Sunshine people one day in Ranney care about those children, and it was an honor to be able to collaborate as a team and create a design that would suit Caitlin and his family. I’m incredibly happy with everything you got here together.”
Barbara “Babthrough” Norsworthy, a former student of Chattahoochee Tech Interiors, who is also a georgia Tech alumnus, contributed decisively to connecting the school to Ranney’s Sunshine. After a 28-year career, he returned to school to pursue his interest in interior design. “I chose Chattahoochee Tech because they offer a two-year interior design program, and the Woodstock campus is convenient for my residency position,” Norsworthy said. As a student at Chattahoochee Tech, he began running with Sunshine for a Ranney Day as a component of the school-required internship program. Regarding the nonprofit’s latest recent project, Norsworthy said Chattahoochee Tech academics “brought a new attitude to the design of the makeover.”
“Caitlin’s new bedroom and break room offer functionality, while being sophisticated, comfortable and fun,” Norsworthy said. “The design is also quiet and relaxing, which will give Caitlin and his parents a glorious sanctuary.”
The Chattahoochee Tech team of students who worked on this task included Lucretia Cochran, Amber Farist, Hanna Funes-Cruz, Lauren Holt, Allyson James, Cassie Keeling, Jamie Petraglia, Sierra Smith and Jamie Thorn. “I enjoyed watching their talents and strengths emerge as a group,” Burton said. “I couldn’t be more proud of them!”
For more than 8 years, Sunshine on a Ranney Day has worked through associations and donors to provide loose home renovations worth tens of thousands of dollars for young people with special design desires and high-end structure. Among the corporations they thanked for helping to sponsor this assignment were: Cambria; Houses of Ecraft; Kids ‘R’ Children’s Learning Academies; MCN Companies; PMC structure materials; Reliable heating and air, plumbing and electricity; American cabinetry. Companies that offer fabric resources include: America Signature Furniture; Chick-fil-A Avalon; Delta faucet; Echols glass and mirror; Ferguson; Interceramic USA; Keuco USA; Net Studio Collection; Photography Nicole W; Phillip Jeffries Ltd. y Pulley and Associates, Inc.
Before the pandemic hit in March, these academics gathered to plan each and every detail of the design of this elegant project.
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Before the coronavirus pandemic hit the spring semester, the team of design scholars met at the Chattahoochee Tech Woodstock campus to plan each and every detail of the design of this elegant project.
Cassie Keeling, a student at Chattahoochee Tech, appears here, with the installation.
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Long description Chattahoochee Tech students used AutoCAD generation to create butterfly shapes, which were then cut through computer-controlled virtual machines (CNCs). Cassie Keeling, a member of the elegance assignment team, is here to prepare the room before the big revelation.
This elegant assignment included the design of a wheelchair accessible bathroom.
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Long Description The elegance assignment included the design of a bathroom available in an aesthetic and functional wheelchair.
This press release produced through Chattahoochee Technical College. The reviews expressed here are those of the author.
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