Delivering District-Wide Infrastructure Improvements Without Interrupting Learning

Rockford Public Schools didn’t have a single building problem. They had 31.

Across the district, heating, cooling, and air quality systems were inconsistent. Some aging, some undersized, some no longer meeting the needs of the classrooms they served. With ESSER funding in place, the district had an opportunity to address it at scale.

But the timeline was fixed. The budget was fixed. And the buildings weren’t going anywhere.
Students still needed to learn. Teachers still needed to teach. Schools still needed to operate.

What That Meant in Practice

This wasn’t one project; it was a program moving across 31 active schools, each with different conditions, layouts, and constraints. Most of the work had to happen during the summer months, leaving a narrow window, roughly nine weeks, to complete major construction before students returned.

At the same time, demand for equipment was high nationwide. Chillers, RTUs, and electrical components were difficult to secure. Skilled labor was stretched thin across the region, competing with other major projects.

And inside each building, there were people to coordinate with, principals, staff, and district leadership, each with their own priorities and responsibilities. Nothing about the work was isolated, and everything had to stay connected.

Establishing a Way Forward

IFS was brought in to provide owner-side leadership across the program, which helped the district move from a set of projects to a coordinated approach. Our team made sure we had a deep understanding of what they needed before accelerating forward.

YEAR ONE

Learning Before Scaling

6 SCHOOLS | $80M

The most complex schools were addressed first, because they revealed the most about our process needed to look like moving forward.

Actual costs began to replace assumptions. Infrastructure limitations became clear. The realities of working within each building started to shape how the rest of the program would move forward.

Designs were adjusted. Budgets were recalibrated. Communication improved across teams.

By the end of the first year, the district wasn’t guessing anymore. They were operating with real information.

YEAR TWO

Adjusting to What the Market Gave Us

11 SCHOOLS | $40M

As supply chain and labor constraints intensified, the plan had to adapt.

IFS worked directly with manufacturers to secure equipment earlier in the process. Bid packages were structured to better match the skilled labor available in the region. Work was sequenced across schools to maintain progress without overextending crews.

This wasn’t about sticking to the original plan.
It was about making informed adjustments early enough to matter.

YEAR THREE

Carrying It Through

14 SCHOOLS | $38M

With the approach established, the final year became about consistency.

IFS maintained detailed reporting for the district and school board, ensuring that decisions remained aligned with budget, schedule, and expectations. Each school moved forward within the same structure, even as conditions varied.

By the end of the program, the district had something that’s difficult to achieve at this scale:
Control.

Working Inside Real Schools

Every phase of the work happened in environments that didn’t pause.

Classrooms needed to be protected. Equipment had to be safeguarded. Construction zones had to be clearly defined and safe.

Communication wasn’t optional; it was a constant part of our journey.

Our team worked directly with principals, staff, and district leadership to make sure that what was happening in the field stayed aligned with what was happening inside each building.