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Colourful painted patterns frame windows scattered across the bright red facade of this primary school in the Italian town of Chiarano by Treviso office
C+S Architects (+ slideshow).
Chiarano Primary School was designed by C+S Architects to accommodate 250 students in ten classrooms with glazed walls that allow light to permeate
throughout the interior.
Interior spaces are arranged around a large entrance hall featuring a double-height atrium containing a glazed box that intersects the main building.
Related story: Stone-clad base supports stacked classrooms at PFP Architekten's school in Genoa
Windows along all sides of the central structure allow natural light to flood the entrance foyer and provide views of a garden used for teaching that is
constructed within the glazed walls of the inner cube.
The garden is raised on columns to ensure views across the ground floor are maintained and the glass walls permit views between the floors and from
one side of the first floor balcony to the other.
"The building is porous," said the architects. "It allows the territory and the light to flow inside the spaces."
Light tubes with transparent domed caps embedded in the structure supporting the garden reflect light downwards into a library underneath.
The library is positioned at the heart of the building and is intended to be a publicly accessible space, open to the rest of the community after the pupils
have left.
"School buildings are in fact the places where a multi-ethnic and multi-cultural experience happens naturally through the children," said the architects.
"This is why we have started to enhance the more public spaces in order to open them up to the whole community after the school hours."
Circulation areas around the edges of the foyer and a balcony on the first floor negate the need for enclosed corridors which would obstruct sight lines
across the space.
The southwest facade of the two-story building is fully glazed and provides views of the surrounding countryside from the classrooms within.
Walls separating the classrooms from the public spaces feature glazing between the ceilings and horizontal plywood storage units that reach a height of
120 centimetres.
The glass sections offer a visual connection to the rest of the building, while the shelving can be used to store pupils' belongings and block views when
seated that could distract them when working.
As a manifestation of the architects' belief that schools can provide "punctual coloured events in the grey urban sprawl", one of the building's facades is
painted red and features geometric shapes in contrasting colours around the window openings.
A glazed facade, facing the South-West side, opens the view on the surrounding countryside. The walls which separate the classrooms from the
corridors are opaque only for the first 120cm and glazed on the upper parts. This condition enhances the intervisibility from the outside space and among
the inner spaces.
No corridors are used for the school layout as all the classrooms access happens on the main entrance hall on the ground level and thanks to a
suspended balcony on the first floor. This solution maximises the visibility among the spaces.
The intervisibility is also emphasised by the visual connections between the different levels, thanks to the double hight designed for the main entrance
and to the design of a glazed 'lantern of light' that is suspended over the library, which gives character to the school entrance hall. The suspended lantern
houses a 'botanic garden' for outdoor experimentations.
The library is the core of the project, and it has been thought as a new urban node for the community, since it is kept open after the school hours.
This Kindergarten in northern Italy by Austrian architects Feld72 is split into three separate house-shaped blocks connected by glazing. More
04:08
Indian architect Sandeep Khosla explains the importance of outdoor learning at DPS Kindergarten School in Bangalore, India. Larger version + story
LCR Architectes clads French middle school with tarnished copper panels
Angular brick gables frame Kings College Library by Mitchell Taylor Workshop
Stripy Melbourne school by McBride Charles Ryan mirrors the local skyline
School building by Mitchell Taylor Workshop contrasts pale stone with grey brick
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