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Lance Hollander

Lance Hollander

Director of District OperationsMariemont City Schools

Lance Hollander serves as the Director of Human Resources and District Operations for the Mariemont City School District and brings over 31 years of experience in education. Mr. Hollander oversees a diverse portfolio that includes talent management, staff recruitment, and the essential day-to-day operations that keep the district running smoothly.

A key member of the district leadership team, Mr. Hollander has been deeply involved in Mariemont’s Destination 2026 strategic planning, focusing on creating purposeful, safe learning environments and establishing operational excellence through data-driven metrics. Additionally, Mr. Hollander played an integral role in the design and construction of the new Mariemont High School, overseeing the day-to-day management of the project. 

Mr. Hollander is known for his commitment to building strong, positive relationships among staff, students, and the community to support the district's mission of academic excellence.

Thu Oct 298:00 AM – 9:00 AM

Vision Before the Blueprint: How Destination 2026 Shaped the Design of Mariemont High School

Facility planning often begins with buildings instead of educational outcomes, leading to misaligned, underperforming spaces. Mariemont City Schools r…Facility planning often begins with buildings instead of educational outcomes, leading to misaligned, underperforming spaces. Mariemont City Schools reversed this approach through Destination 2026, a twelve-year, educator-driven vision defining stude…Facility planning often begins with buildings instead of educational outcomes, leading to misaligned, underperforming spaces. Mariemont City Schools reversed this approach through Destination 2026, a twelve-year, educator-driven vision defining student experiences and skills. This session demonstrates how district leaders, educators, and designers aligned governance, instruction, and design to create a high-performing high school. Through real-wo…Facility planning often begins with buildings instead of educational outcomes, leading to misaligned, underperforming spaces. Mariemont City Schools reversed this approach through Destination 2026, a twelve-year, educator-driven vision defining student experiences and skills. This session demonstrates how district leaders, educators, and designers aligned governance, instruction, and design to create a high-performing high school. Through real-world insights and interactive discussion, participants will learn how to translate vision into environments that support student success, safety, and adaptability.Show MoreClick the title to see all detailsShow More

EDsession (60 minutes in classrooms)Session TypeTRACK 3: From Vision to Reality — Planning, funding, delivery, operations, and safetySession Track
Chris Patek
Steven Estepp
Brent Wise
Lance Hollander
Chris Patek
Chris PatekPrincipal, VP of Strategic Initiatives, MSA Design
Steven Estepp
Steven EsteppSuperintendent, Mariemont City Schools
Brent Wise
Brent WiseAssistant Superintendent, Mariemont City Schools
Lance Hollander
Lance HollanderDirector of District Operations, Mariemont City Schools
Chris Patek
Chris PatekPrincipal, VP of Strategic Initiatives, MSA Design
Steven Estepp
Steven EsteppSuperintendent, Mariemont City Schools
Brent Wise
Brent WiseAssistant Superintendent, Mariemont City Schools
Lance Hollander
Lance HollanderDirector of District Operations, Mariemont City Schools
Tags:Group D
Allow Registration:No
Capacity Unlimited:No
Indicate how the topic is applicable to Health, Safety, Welfare (HSW) Design credits.:This session qualifies for Health, Safety, and Welfare (HSW) credit as it directly addresses how the design and planning of educational facilities impact occupant well-being, safety, and performance. Participants will explore how vision-driven decision-making influences critical factors such as spatial organization, environmental quality, student safety, and adaptability to changing learning needs. Through a real-world case study, the session demonstrates how collaboration among educators, designers, and district leadership results in learning environments that support physical safety, mental well-being, and effective supervision. Strategies for aligning facility design with student-centered outcomes—including flexible learning spaces, community connectivity, and secure, inclusive environments—will be presented. Attendees will gain practical knowledge applicable to the design, evaluation, and improvement of educational facilities, with a focus on creating environments that enhance health, safety, and overall user welfare.
Learner Engagement:This session is designed around adult learning principles that emphasize relevance, experience, participation, and immediate application. Rather than a lecture, the session will function as an active learning experience where participants engage directly with the content, each other, and the presenters. To ground learning in real-world relevance, the session uses the Mariemont case study as a practical example, allowing participants to connect concepts to challenges they face in their own districts or projects. To leverage participant experience, attendees will engage in facilitated small-group discussions where they share current barriers and successes in aligning educational vision with facility planning. These peer-to-peer exchanges allow participants to learn from diverse perspectives across education, design, and facilities roles. The session will include a guided application exercise in which participants translate a sample educational priority (e.g., collaboration, student wellness) into spatial design strategies. This hands-on activity reinforces learning through doing and encourages interdisciplinary thinking. Live polling and real-time feedback tools may be used to capture audience perspectives, compare approaches, and spark discussion, ensuring broad participation. Finally, integrated educator insights will connect design decisions to classroom impact, reinforcing practical outcomes and credibility. The intent will be for participants to leave not only with ideas, but with actionable frameworks and strategies they can immediately apply in their own schools or work.
Learning Objective 1:Assess how educational facility design decisions influence student health, safety, and welfare, including factors such as spatial flexibility, environmental quality, and student well-being.