Texas’ first and only Educare school has officially broken ground. The facility, located on the Texas A&M San Antonio campus, will provide quality early childhood education with flexible classrooms, enhanced accessible childcare and opportunities for university students studying childhood development to gain hands-on experience. Image Credit: Pfluger Architects
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New Educare School in San Antonio to Alleviate Area’s Childcare Desert Struggle

By Fay Harvey

SAN ANTONIO — Construction has commenced on Texas’ first Educare school. Located on the Texas A&M San Antonio Campus, the project marks a massive stride for childcare accessibility, education and early childhood development studies in the area.

The $22 million, 26,000-square-foot building will be devoted to teaching and caring for children aged six months to five years. Educare, a nationwide provider of early childhood education, aims to provide quality early childhood education that doubles as accessible childcare for families representing a range of economic backgrounds. The school will also serve as a hands-on teaching resource for Texas A&M San Antonio students who are studying child development and business.

“Educare will be the gold standard for childcare and childhood education,” said Salvador Hector Ochoa, Texas A&M San Antonio president, in a statement. “The one-of-a-kind facility also represents our commitment to enhancing the region’s birth-to-college educational ecosystem, as it enables students and community members to access childcare and higher education while working full-time, strengthening the University and the city’s workforce.”

The facility, which broke ground last month for a slated spring 2026 opening, is an initiative led by the Texas A&M College of Education & Human Development, with operation led by the university’s early childhood experts. College students will use the environment as a teaching model to study early childhood learning and understand best practices. On the administration side, business students will gain experience working through tasks such as state licensing regulations and balancing budgets.

The nature-filled play areas are designed to evoke creativity and imagination in the preschool and kindergarten students. Image Credit: Pfluger Architects/Texas A&M – San Antonio

A home away from home for 200 students—including infants, toddlers and students in preschool and kindergarten—the facility offers flexible classrooms for teaching, outdoor space for activities and areas dedicated to strengthening family-school resources.

A mix of grass, astroturf and resilient pavement surfaces with walking paths will be integrated into the playground, which features climbing structures and slides that were designed with accessibility in mind. A small stage for plays and small-group activities is one of numerous activity areas included in the plans. These spaces for engagement aim to inspire artistic creation where children can use commonplace objects to engage in self-expression and dramatic play. For increased safety, both play areas and classrooms are shielded from outsider view.

Designed by Austin, Texas-based Plufger Architects, the exterior of the facility aims to blend in with the surrounding Texas A&M Campus, reflecting San Antonio’s historic architecture, which uses brick and San Saba sandstone, a natural stone derived from quarries in San Saba, Texas. Building accents such as archways, canopies and a covered communal plaza will feed directly into play areas, seamlessly blending work and play .

“We wanted the building’s form, materials and layout to honor the local context while providing a supportive environment for Educare’s innovative educational mission,” said Chris Lammers, AIA, higher education practice director at Pfluger Architects, in a statement.

Funding for the first-of-its-kind facility is delivered through various sources including $4.4 million from philanthropy, $9.6 million from the city of San Antonio and $7.9 million from Texas A&M. The facility’s construction plans were first approved in November 2024 as part of the Texas A&M Regents sweeping approval of over $500 million in campus construction and improvement plans.