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    A new school of thought: education projects that really teach us something

A new school of thought: education projects that really teach us something

Creative, innovative and outside-the-box thinking in education architecture serves not only to build schools that optimise learning conditions, it also drives architects and designers to find solutions that work for the environment.

Realrich Architecture Workshop - RAW Architecture
Peter Smisek

Por Realrich Architecture Workshop - RAW Architecture y Peter Smisek

junio 2, 2020 | 10:00 pm CUT

Environmental concerns are often central to the discussion when it comes to new construction projects. With this in mind, architects and clients alike seek to reinvent common building types such as schools as a way of conserving limited resources such as land, energy and materials. Far from imposing unwelcomed constraints, these new considerations actually create opportunities to design more inspiring educational spaces.
Take The Heights Building, a new school designed by Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG) in Arlington, Virginia. The architects have designed the school as a series of five one-storey blocks cascading and rotating around a single pivot point. Each floor of the new educational facility receives an ample outdoor terrace, while retaining the intimate scale typical of a single-storey structure. A triple-height lobby, an auditorium, a library, a cafeteria and a gymnasium are located beneath the staggered classroom wings creating a dense, efficient layout.
In Lisbon, ARX Portugal Arquitectos have designed a new home for the international Redbridge School, located on an unusual urban plot which faces two opposite streets, yet whose centre is taken up by an existing urban villa. Here, the architects have designed a smaller organically shaped kindergarten pavilion linked to the new more angular school block by a narrow passageway. While both share the same external cladding and internal timber structure, the more informal, intimate design of the pavilion contrasts with the more open, street-facing wing for older children.
Located in China's southern Hainan province, Huandao Middle School, designed by TAO - Trace Architecture Office, embraces its dense inner-city location in central Haikou, and utilises natural ventilation – facilitated by its colonnades – for the passive cooling of its communal spaces. Both the compact educational block, as well as a slab containing student dormitories, are lifted up on columns to create a feeling of spaciousness, while robust screens filter out the glare and the heat from the classrooms.
Another school in the tropics is Realrich Architecture Workshop's School of Alfa Omega in Tangerang City in Indonesia. The architects have elevated the school on concrete columns from the unstable ground below, and the walls are made using locally available brick. The school features a light steel and bamboo thatched roof created together with local craftspeople. Combined with the school's efficient radial layout, this creates an impressively rich roofline which echoes local traditions, while also providing the children with a comfortable and naturally cool learning environment.
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