Project Name
Reggio SchoolLocation
Area (sqm)
5496Detailed Information | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Project Name | Reggio School | Location |
48 Calle de San Enrique de Ossó 28055 Madrid
Spain | Area (sqm) | 5496 |
The building’s innovative insulation is part of a three-pronged approach to reducing the building’s environmental footprint, the other two being the selection of a vertical configuration to reduce land occupation and the radical reduction of construction materials which was accomplished by avoiding extraneous elements such as claddings, drop ceilings and raised technical floors. The latter also means that “the building unapologetically allows pipes, conduits, wires and grilles to become part of its visual and material ecosystem”, as the architects put it, which is another way in how the school’s architecture encourages children to make sense of their surroundings. Sustainability aside, the building’s vertical configuration also reflects the school’s pedagogical organization: younger children start their education on the lower level and gradually move up the building as they get older.
At the heart of the building, a monumental, 8-metre-high, 460-square-metre multipurpose space serves as the school’s social hub which can be used as a gymnasium, assembly hall, and art classroom, as well as host PTA meetings and community events. With the ability to semi-open to the exterior through a wide arch that leads to a covered terrace, the space was conceived as a modern-day agora complete with expansive views of the verdant landscape. Higher up the building, the classrooms for the older students are organized around a richly planted atrium, not unlike a village bordering a forest, a layout that reflects, in Andrés Jaque’s words, “an increased ability to explore the ecosystem of the school for oneself”.